Preamble

The House met at a Quarter before Three of the Clock, Mr. SPEAKER in the Chair.

PRIVATE BUSINESS.

Great Western Railway Bill (by Order),

As amended, considered; to be read the Third time.

Oral Answers to Questions — CONGO BASIN TREATIES.

Mr. Day: asked the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs if he will give particulars of the present position in regard to the Congo Basin Treaties?

The Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs (Mr. Eden): I am not clear from the hon. Member's question what precisely is the information which he desires in connection with these treaties, but if he wishes to know whether they are still in force, the answer is in the affirmative. I would also draw attention to the answer given by my right hon. Friend the Secretary for the Department of Overseas Trade in reply to a question on 9th December, 1935, in which he stated that His Majesty's Government in the United Kingdom are advised that these treaties cannot be terminated or modified except with the consent of all the parties concerned. Among the foreign countries concerned are those which have ratified the St. Germain Convention of 1919, namely, Belgium, France, Italy, Japan, Portugal and the United States of America.

Mr. Day: Are any of these treaties due to expire shortly? What is their duration?

Mr. Eden: Perhaps the hon. Member will put those questions on the Paper.

Oral Answers to Questions — FOREIGN REARMAMENT.

Mr. Sorensen: asked the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs whether he

possesses information respecting further plans for rearmament by other Powers alleged by them to be consequential upon the present British rearmament plans?

Mr. Eden: I am not aware that any foreign Government has stated that its rearmament is consequential upon ours.

Mr. Sorensen: Although no foreign Government may have stated such, does not the right hon. Gentleman agree that, in fact, the plans of rearmament of Italy and Japan have been consequential on our own plan of rearmament, and, that being the case, will he not agree that we are involved now in a fresh race in arms, to the detriment of the whole world?

Mr. Eden: No, Sir, I could not disagree more with the hon. Gentleman.

Mr. Vyvyan Adams: Had we any other course open to us in view of the volume of German rearmament?

Oral Answers to Questions — WESTERN EUROPEAN PACT.

Mr. R. Acland: asked the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs whether it is his intention to inform the German Government that this country cannot seriously consider any part of proposals which contain the suggestion that this country should share the task of deciding whether aggression has taken place with Italy, in view of the Italian action in attacking Abyssinia?

Mr. Eden: I presume that the hon. Member is referring to reports which have appeared in the Press with regard to the negotiations for a new Western European Pact. I have no statement to make on that subject at present.

Mr. Acland: As Italy was the only nation which did not think the Italian attack on Abyssinia amounted to an act of aggression, might not the right hon. Gentleman save the Germans trouble by saying that we could not consider acting as joint jurors with Italy in deciding whether an act of aggression has taken place or not?

Oral Answers to Questions — ITALY (BROADCASTS).

Mr. Pilkington: asked the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs whether his attention has been called to the recent Italian broadcasts alleging the use of


poison gas by British bombing aeroplanes on tribes near Aden; and what action he proposes to take?

Mr. Eden: Yes, Sir, my attention has been drawn to the Italian broadcasts in question. The allegations regarding the use of poison gas are entirely unfounded. With regard to the second part of my hon. Friend's question, His Majesty's Government consider that the publication of the true facts of this case constitutes sufficient action.

Mr. Pilkington: Could not the right hon. Gentleman ask the Italian Government to have broadcast a definite denial of these allegations?

Mr. Eden: No, Sir, I do not think it is worth while.

Mr. Paling: Is it not a fact that we did bomb these natives, and cannot a more humane way be found of dealing with these delinquents, especially as our brutalities are taken as an excuse by other countries?

Mr. Eden: That is another question which should not be addressed to me. What I am dealing with is an entirely false statement.

Commander Locker-Lampson: asked the Secretary of State for the Colonies whether the anti-British propaganda, which was broadcast from Italy in Arabic for subversive purposes in Palestine, has now ceased?

The Secretary of State for the Colonies (Mr. Ormsby-Gore): So far as I can ascertain, there have been no such broadcasts as would call for further representations to the Italian Government.

Mr. Mander: Is the right hon. Gentleman not aware that during the last few days there has been such a broadcast in Somaliland?

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: His Majesty's Government know nothing of it, and have no reason to believe that it took place.

Mr. Mander: May I send the right hon. Gentleman a paper containing particulars?

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: If what the hon. Gentleman proposes to send me is simply a Press cutting, I would like to know what is the authority for the statement?

Mr. Mander: Somebody who heard it and wrote at the time.

Brigadier-General Sir Henry Croft: Has the right hon. Gentleman any information as to whether this was not in Italian Somaliland?

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: I think that is quite likely.

Oral Answers to Questions — SPAIN.

Mr. Arthur Henderson: asked the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs whether he has received any note from the Spanish Government with reference to the presence of four Italian divisions in Spain; and whether he will make a statement thereon?

Mr. Cocks: asked the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs whether he has considered the note presented by the Spanish Government to the effect that four Italian divisions are now taking part in the offensive on the Guadalajara front, that two more are due to arrive, and that the Italian and German fleets are planning to attack Barcelona and Valencia; and whether he can make any statement on the matter?

Mr. Eden: I received a note from the Spanish Ambassador on the subject of Italian intervention in Spain on Sunday last. The note is at present under consideration and I am not yet in a position to make any statement on the subject.

Mr. Henderson: asked the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs whether any reply has been received from General Franco's authorities to the protest addressed to them by His Majesty's Ambassador at Hendaye against their failure to notify His Majesty's Government of their intention to lay, mines in waters remote from ports in regard to which warnings had been previously issued; and whether he will state the nature of the reply?

Mr. Eden: His Majesty's Ambassador received his instructions about 10th March. No reply has as yet been received.

Mr. Henderson: Is it not a fact that in this situation British mercantile ships are placed in great danger, having regard to the fact that these mines have been placed indiscriminately?

Mr. Eden: I can assure the hon. Gentleman that we are alive to the dangers of


the situation. I would not like him or the House to think that because we have not had any reply we have not taken any action in other respects.

Mr. Mander: asked the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs whether he is now able to state which of His Majesty's ships will maintain touch with His Majesty's diplomatic and consular representatives at Valencia, Barcelona, Palma, and elsewhere in Spanish ports during the next few weeks?

Mr. Eden: It has been arranged that His Majesty's hospital ship "Maine" together with at least one destroyer and one depot ship, shall be available on the north-east coast of Spain and Majorca for the purpose to which the hon. Member refers. In addition to these, I understand that a cruiser is at present available.

Mr. Mander: Will they be sending regular reports to the Government as to what takes place out there?

Mr. Eden: They will continue to do what they have been doing up to the present.

Viscountess Astor: Will the right hon. Gentleman ask the hon. Member who put the question whether he will give his support for a bigger and better Navy?

Mr. Mander: If it is used for the right purpose.

Mr. Cocks: asked the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs whether he has now received any information from the British authorities in Cadiz, Gibraltar, and elsewhere as to the landing of strong Italian forces in Spain since the imposition of the ban on 20th February; and, if not, will he ask these authorities for information on the subject?

Mr. Eden: I have received a report from Gibraltar, to the effect that an Italian vessel arrived at Cadiz on 5th March with an unknown number of men on board. I am making further inquiries on this subject. Apart from this particular matter the authorities at Gibraltar reported yesterday that they had no confirmation of any landing of foreign personnel in Spain in contravention of the agreement regarding volunteers.

Mr. Ellis Smith: Will the right hon. Gentleman consider making a broadcast appeal to the peoples of the whole of Europe demanding that all foreign troops should be withdrawn from Spain?

Mr. Bellenger: Has the right hon. Gentleman observed reports that organised bodies of Italian troops have entered Spain, and is that not a matter for direct representations to the Italian Government, apart from the Non-Intervention Committee?

Mr. Eden: That is another question, which the hon. Member will perhaps put on the Paper.

Mr. Shinwell: Does not the right hon. Gentleman agree that this particular instance is a confirmation of the indications that the Non-Intervention Pact is not being made effective?

Mr. Eden: No, Sir, I could not agree with that. I have received a report, and I am making inquiries to try to check its accuracy. Until I have done that, I cannot say any more.

Mr. Sorensen: May we have a report from the right hon. Gentleman when he has checked this report?

Mr. Eden: When I have any more information, I will give it to the House.

Miss Wilkinson: Can the right hon. Gentleman give an indication as to whether there are any Italian troops in Spain?

Mr. Eden: There are plenty of Italian nationals in Spain—I am not disputing that—and others, too.

Mr. N. Maclean: asked the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs what interests Germany has to safeguard in the Mediterranean Sea, and if none, why Germany has been allotted a share with Italy of the patrol of the Mediterranean coast of Spain; what share of the patrol of this area has been allotted to Great Britain; and, if Great Britain has been excluded, whether he can state the reasons for such exclusion, in view of the British interests in the Mediterranean?

Mr. Eden: The plan of naval observation has been agreed to by all the nations represented on the Non-Intervention Committee as being the best that can be devised in the circumstances. It will


be clear from the White Paper which has been recently issued that no question arises, or could arise, of the exclusion of British ships from the Mediterranean. British ships are, in fact, allotted a wide stretch of coast on the Mediterranean coast of Spain.

Mr. Maclean: asked the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs whether Great Britain was represented at the conference of European Powers held recently at Seville; whether he can state the purpose of this conference; and whether he is satisfied that no decisions detrimental to British trade with Spain were arrived at?

Mr. Eden: I have made inquiries, from which it does not appear that any conference of European Powers has recently been held at Seville.

Mr. Cocks: asked the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs whether he can now give an estimate as to the strength of the Italian and German forces fighting in Spain against the Spanish Government; and, if not, will he endeavour to obtain information on the subject from British authorities in Spain, Italy, and Germany?

Mr. Mander: asked the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs what is the latest information in possession of the Government with regard to the number of foreigners now fighting in Spain?

Mr. Eden: I would refer the hon. Member to the reply given by my Noble Friend on 10th February to a question asked by my hon. and gallant Friend the Member for South Paddington (Vice-Admiral Taylor) to which I have nothing to add.

Mr. Cocks: Will the right hon. Gentleman answer the second part of the question? Will he endeavour to obtain information?

Mr. Eden: We have information at the Foreign Office on the numbers of foreign nationals in Spain. What I cannot give to the House is figures for the accuracy of which I cannot vouch.

Mr. Cocks: Has the right hon. Gentleman any information which confirms that there are at least 100,000 Italians in Spain?

Mr. Eden: The hon. Member has asked me for figures which is just what I cannot supply.

Mr. Mander: Would it be a fair estimate to say that there are about 30,000 German troops and 100,000 Italian troops there, and that those are the only ones which arrived in units?

Oral Answers to Questions — POISON GAS PROTOCOL.

Sir Percy Harris: asked the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs which country, after the ratification of the Geneva Poison Gas Protocol, 1925, was the first to start manufacturing gas for war purposes; and at what date this country started manufacturing it after its signature to this Protocol?

Mr. Eden: I am unaware of any evidence, official or otherwise, upon which it would be possible to frame an answer to the first part of the hon. Member's question. As regards the second part, the answer is that small quantities have been manufactured for experiment in chemical defence ever since the War. The hon. Member will be aware that manufacture for this specific purpose is not forbidden by the Protocol.

Sir P. Harris: Could not the right hon. Gentleman say or find out which country took the initiative in manufacturing it for war purposes? There must have been some justification for this country manufacturing gas masks on a large scale. There must have been some cause for it.

Mr. Eden: No, Sir. I should say that if the nations had accepted our draft Disarmament Convention on this subject, we should all be in an infinitely better position.

Sir P. Harris: When did this country feel the necessity of preparing for production on a large scale both of gas masks and gas itself? There must have been some action of some country on some date in some year.

Mr. Eden: I think we must all be conscious of the distressing fact that nations do not always attach the same importance to their signatures as they used to do.

Mr. Sorensen: Did not the right hon. Gentleman state that in fact we have no gas here except for purely experimental purposes on a small scale?

Mr. Eden: I think the answer is quite clear. Perhaps if the hon. Member wants more details, he will ask the Department concerned.

Oral Answers to Questions — ROYAL NAVY.

PROMOTION.

Mr. R. C. Morrison: asked the First Lord of the Admiralty the date of the Order in Council which limits the number of promotions to second lieutenant, Royal Marines, from the ranks to two; What are the reasons for so limiting the number, in view of the fact that no such limit exists for direct-entry officers; and, as this ranker promotion scheme has for some years been part of the normal recruitment system, will the Admiralty now take steps to have it removed?

The Parliamentary Secretary to the Admiralty (Lord Stanley): The relevant Orders - in - Council are dated 11th February, 1913, and 26th June, 1923. Up to the present, no reason has arisen for increasing the number of commissions

Year.
Number of Seamen ratings who appeared before Fleet Selection Boards.
Number of Ratings from col. B who received commissions.
Number of Ratings in col. B who have since been promoted to Warrant rank.
Number of Ratings in col. B. who have since been discharged by purchase.




A.
B.
C.
D.
E.


1933
…
…
17
6
5
1


1934
…
…
19
5
2
1


1935
…
…
12
3
1
—


1936
…
…
10
4
—
—

Notes.

1. Certain ratings appeared before the selection boards on more than one occasion; one rating who was unsuccessful in 5934 was selected in 1935.

2. Of the remainder, 20 are still serving on the lower deck, IS as Petty Officers or Acting Petty Officers and 2 as Leading Seamen or Acting Leading Seamen. In a few instances the names of unsuccessful candidates before the Fleet Selection Boards were not reported and their ultimate disposal is not therefore known.

Mr. Parker: asked the First Lord of the Admiralty the numbers of the last entries of special-entry cadets, executive and engineering, paymaster cadets, and Royal Marines, and the names of the schools from which they were entered; whether the system of early promotion to commissioned rank for writers, supply, and other ratings of the accountant branch is to be similar to the midshipman (E) scheme for artificer-apprentices or the sub-lieutenant (E) scheme, or both; and when he is likely to be able to announce the details of the scheme or schemes?

to be awarded annually since it has been possible, within the existing maximum, to give commissions to all suitable candidates. As I told the hon. Member on 25th February last, consideration will be given to the removal of the present limitation if more than two suitable candidates are forthcoming this year.

Mr. Parker: asked the First Lord of the Admiralty the number of candidates who appeared before the Fleet selection boards for sub-lieutenant in the years 1933 to 1936, respectively, the numbers who received commissions, the numbers who have since been promoted to warrant rank, the number who have purchased their discharge from the Service, and what has happened to the remainder?

Lord Stanley: As the information requested can be best presented in the form of a table, I will, with the hon. Member's permission, circulate it in the OFFICIAL REPORT.

Following is the information:

Lord Stanley: The last special entries of cadets, executive and engineering, of paymaster cadets, and of Royal Marines numbered 50, 20, 20 and 22, respectively. As the list of schools from which they came is a long one, I will, with the hon. Member's consent, have it printed in the OFFICIAL REPORT. As regards the latter part of the question, I would refer the hon. Member to the reply given to him on 3rd March when I stated that I would again consider the possibility of instituting a system of early promotion to commissioned rank for ratings of the Accountant Branch.

Following is the list of schools:


Executive.


Stowe.*
Wellington.


Eton.
Marlborough.


Victoria College, Jersey.
Tonbridge, Ampleforth.*


Westminster.
Nautical College,


Bembridge School, Isle of Wight.
Pangbourne. Clifton.


Wellington.
Woking County.


Cheltenham.
Wellington.


Uppingham.
King's School, Worcester.*


St. Paul's.



St. Paul's.
Felsted.


Marlborough.*
Brighton College.


Ipswich School.
Bedford School, Bedford.


Sherborne.



Welington.
Portsmouth Municipal College.*


Marlborough.



Christ's Hospital.
Pocklington School,


Charterhouse.*
E. Yorks.


Cranleigh.
Clifton.


Portsmouth Grammar.
Charterhouse.


Winchester.
Fettis.


Radley College.*
Seaford College.


Framlingham.*
St. Paul's.


Imperial Service College.*
Blundell's.



Uppingham.*


Marlborough.*
King William's, Isle of Man.


Imperial Service College.
Chard, Somerset.


Oundle.
Taunton School.

Engineering.


Monkton Coombe School, Bath.
Cambridge and County High School.


Bedford School, Bedford.
Portsmouth Grammar. Oundle.


Portsmouth Grammar.
Uppingham.


King William's, Isle of Man.
Dover College.



Haileybury.


Campbell College, Belfast.
Trent College.*



Portsmouth Grammar.


Hampton Grammar.
Prior Park, Bath.*


St. Bee's School, Cumberland.
Denstone College, Staffs.


Highgate School.
Bradfield College,


Bishop Stortford College.*
Berks.

Paymaster.


Tonbridge.
Loretto.


Newton College.
Uppingham.*


Clifton.
Douai School.*


Dover College.
Xavierian College.*


Newton College.
Berkhamsted.


Weymouth College.
Rugby.*


Bedford School.
Blundell's.


Oundle.*
Weymouth College.


Felsted.
King's, Bruton.


Peter Symond's, Winchester.
Abbotsholme.

Royal Marines.


Cheltenham College.*
Wellington College.*


Shrewsbury School.
Edinburgh Academy.*


Cheltenham College.
Campbell College.


Cheltenham College.
Clifton College.


Malvern College.*
Charterhouse School.


King's School, Ely.
Kelly College.


Kelly College.*
Marlborough College.*


Charterhouse School.*
Cranbrook School.

Beaumont College.
Stubbington House,


King's School, Rochester, and Taunton School.
Fareham, and Blundell's School.*



Wellington College.*


Imperial Service College, Windsor.
Blundell's School.



Tiverton.*

Note.—* These candidates also attended a tutor for a short period.

ACCIDENTS (ADMIRALTY ESTABLISHMENTS).

Mr. Thorne: asked the First Lord of the Admiralty whether he can give the House any information in connection with a skilled labourer killed on 9th March in the Portsmouth Dockyard while he was working on board the destroyer "Vortigem"; and how many men working under the control of the Admiralty have been killed or injured during the past six weeks?

The Civil Lord of the Admiralty (Mr. Kenneth Lindsay): I regret that on 9th March a skilled labourer (Slinger) was killed on board His Majesty's Ship "Vortigern," then lying in dock at Portsmouth, in the following circumstances. A four-inch gun with its mounting had been lifted by jacks in order to examine the roller path and pivot of the gun. On completion of the examination, the gun was being slowly lowered, when it tilted unexpectedly and the slinger in charge, who was kneeling on the deck, was unfortunately pinned by the mounting against two ammunition racks, bolted to the deck, receiving fatal injuries. An inquest was held on 12th March, the verdict being "Accidental Death caused by misjudgment." A court of inquiry will be held by the dockyard authorities. This is the only fatal accident in His Majesty's Dockyards which has occurred in the six weeks ended 13th March. I take this opportunity of expressing on Admiralty behalf sympathy with the widow and relatives of the deceased; every effort will be made to expedite the award of the compensation payable.
It is not possible to give the total number of workmen in all Admiralty establishments injured during the same period. Returns from the yards at Portsmouth, Devonport, Chatham and Sheerness, where the great majority of the men are employed, show that during this time out of a total of 42,000 men, 244 received injuries as a result of accidents which necessitated their being placed on the hurt list.

DOCKYARD FACILITIES (JARROW).

Miss Wilkinson: asked the First Lord of the Admiralty whether, in view of the present lack of shipping and the possible urgent needs in case of submarine attack in any future war, he will reconsider the question of the utilisation of the Palmer shipyard at Jarrow either as a naval dockyard or being put into order for use as a shadow shipyard in preparation for any national emergency?

Lord Stanley: This question has already been raised by the Jarrow Borough Council and is now under consideration by the Admiralty. I should, however, explain that no requirement exists at present for an additional naval dockyard and that there is already available a reserve of docking facilities in Rosyth dockyard, which is on a care and maintenance basis.

Miss Wilkinson: In view of our experiences of submarine warfare in the last War, are the Government not making suitable preparations in case of future need in this respect?

Lord Stanley: That is rather a question for the Board of Trade.

Mr. Ede: Will the Noble Lord remember that the Tyne does exist as a shipbuilding river?

Lord Stanley: The hon. Member has only to look at the orders which have been given to see that we do.

TIN PRODUCTION (COLONIES).

Mr. Louis Smith: asked the Secretary of State for the Colonies whether, in view of the continued rise in the price of tin and the increase which this will involve in the cost of re-armament, any steps will be taken to increase the tin production of the Colonies, and to remove all restriction now obtaining under the international restriction scheme?

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: I have nothing to add to the reply given on 15th March by my hon. and gallant Friend the Secretary of the Department of Overseas Trade to the hon. Member for Gower (Mr. Grenfell).

Mr. Smith: Is the right hon. Gentleman aware that the steps recently taken have not been effective; and will he consider taking further steps?

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: I do not know what steps my hon. Friend has in mind, or whether he can make any suggestions. I thought that the increase in the quota would have had an effect.

Sir P. Harris: Would it not be much easier to abolish the quota altogether and allow production from the mines unrestricted in view of the terrific scarcity which exists at present?

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: That is not a matter for us alone. It is a matter for international agreement. A number of countries are involved and legislation would be required in all those countries.

Sir P. Harris: But has not our Government taken the initiative in this policy and should we not therefore take the initiative in sweeping away these restrictions?

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: The international committee has been meeting recently and I think it has, probably, been dealing with this matter.

UGANDA (MALAKITE SECT).

Mr. Day: asked the Secretary of State for the Colonies the policy of the Government towards the Malakite sect in Uganda; whether this sect has shown any tendency to increase during the last five years; and will he give particulars of the latest reports received by the Governor from the various provinces on this subject?

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: The policy of the Government towards this sect has been one of non-interference provided that its adherents do not infringe the ordinances providing for the control of public health and property such as those dealing with plague, smallpox and rinderpest. No reports on the sect have been received for seven years past, but if the hon. Member has any more recent information I will make inquiries on the subject. The somewhat obscure sect of the Malakites which appeared in Uganda in 1914 has for the main plank of its platform a strong objection to all medical, sanitary and veterinary measures on the ground that the word for medical officer in the native language used by the sect is also used for a wizard or sorcerer.

Mr. Day: Have the Government taken any action against this sect?

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: I have given the hon. Member an answer.

FEDERATED MALAY STATES (CIVIL LAW).

Mr. Parker: asked the Secretary of State for the Colonies which elements of the population of the Federated Malay States are affected by the Bill recently passed by the Federal Council introducing the English common law into the states; and, in particualr, what will be the effect on the Chinese law of adoption, which has hitherto been recognised by the courts, having regard to the fact that it is understood that care has been taken to avoid interference with the Mohammedan laws of marriage and descent?

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: I have been furnished with a copy of the Bill entitled "Civil Law Enactment Bill, 1937," dealing largely with technical matters of law such as tort feasors, as proposed for introduction into the Federal Council, but I have not yet received the enactment in its final form. I will ask the High Commissioner for a report on the points raised by the hon. Member.

TRANSJORDAN.

Commander Locker-Lampson: asked the Secretary of State for the Colonies what is the area of Transjordania, of which the estimated population is 300,000, and who are the active opponents to the settlement of Jews in Transjordania; and whether the £200,000 now spent in unreproductive services there might be used for colonisation?

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: The area of Transjordan is some 90,000 square kilometres, some 72,000 square kilometres of which are desert area. As regards the second part of the question, I regret that I cannot add to the answer which I gave to the hon. and gallant Member on 8th March. As regards the third part, the sum given in my previous answer is required for the normal expenses of administration and public security.

Oral Answers to Questions — PALESTINE.

FIREARMS (LICENCES).

Commander Locker-Lampson: asked the Secretary of State for the Colonies who is allowed to carry arms in Palestine; whether the use of rifles, revolvers, and guns, is permitted without licence; and how many people have licences at the present moment?

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: Any person may possess firearms who obtains the necessary licence, but the grant of licences is at the discretion of the licensing authority, who is the district commissioner. There is an exception in the case of Bedouin Arabs, who may, subject to certain conditions, carry arms without licence within areas defined by the High Commissioner. The information asked for in the last part of the question is not in my possession, but I will ask the officer administering the Government of Palestine for the latest figures.

Commander Locker-Lampson: Can the right hon. Gentleman say whether the right given exclusively to the Bedouins might not be withdrawn?

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: No, I think it would be extremely difficult to enforce disarmament on the Bedouins in South Palestine. I understand that the position as regards the calibre of the rifles which they are allowed to carry, and the like, is clearly defined and that there have been no breaches of the regulation and no trouble.

Captain Cazalet: Have the authorities who give these licences the right to withdraw them any time they think fit?

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: Yes, Sir, I believe so.

GOVERNMENT POLICY.

Sir Arnold Wilson: asked the Secretary of State for the Colonies whether his attention has been drawn to the statement issued by the British Palestine Committee, under date 3rd March, 1937, and circulated to Members of Parliament, that the letter dated 13th February, 1931, from the Prime Minister to Dr. Weizmann constituted a treaty, having regard to the circumstances in which it was written; and whether he will lay upon the Table any correspondence or memoranda bearing upon this claim?

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: I have seen the statement referred to by my hon. and gallant Friend. I am not aware of any ground for the suggestion that Mr. Ramsay MacDonald's letter to Dr. Weizmann of 13th February, 1931, constitutes a treaty, nor of any correspondence or memoranda relevant to such a claim. As is made clear in the first paragraph of that letter, it was written in order to remove certain misconceptions and misunderstandings which had arisen as to the policy of his Majesty's Government with regard to Palestine as set forth in the White Paper of October, 1930, and was to be read as the authoritative interpretation of that White Paper on the matters with which the letter dealt.

Commander Locker-Lampson: Was the letter given to or by the Government?

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: It was given by the Labour Government to Dr. Weizmann. It was not given to Dr. Weizmann, but was a letter written to him by the Government.

Mr. Mander: Does that still represent the policy of the Government?

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: Certainly.

MURDERS.

Colonel Wedgwood: asked the Secretary of State for the Colonies whether he has any statement to make concerning the murders in Palestine, particularly that of Dr. Lehr at Beisan; and has he considered taking more active measures to suppress banditry?

Sir P. Harris: asked the Secretary of State for the Colonies whether he has any statement to make about the three Jewish labourers ambushed and murdered on 14th March near the village of Yavneel, in the Tiberius district, and the two Jewish shepherds stabbed to death and strangled in the Nazareth Hills on 13th March; and what steps the Government is taking to strengthen the police force organisation both to prevent and punish such outrages?

Mr. Mander: asked the Secretary of State for the Colonies when he proposes to introduce martial law in Palestine, in view of the failure of all other methods of maintaining law and order?

Mr. David Adams: asked the Secretary of State for the Colonies whether he has a statement to make as to the latest

outbreak of violence in Palestine; the responsibility for the same; and whether any extension of the disorder is feared?

Mr. Ormsby Gore: I deeply deplore the assassinations and acts of violence which have occurred in Palestine during the past few months, and I was glad to note that on 10th February a statement issued by the Officer Administering the Government of Palestine was published in the local Press, announcing that the Mufti of Jerusalem and two other members of the Arab Higher Committee had expressed their abhorrence of these acts. But, unfortunately, the criminal acts have continued.
As regards the murder of a Jewish settler at Beit Alpha on 22nd February, five Arabs were arrested on suspicion by 27th February, and further arrests were expected to be made. Following on the murder, on the 26th February, of Dr. Lehrs at Beisan, the owner of a house to which the police dogs followed tracks has been arrested, and search has been made for another suspect who, it is believed, escaped into Transjordan. On 27th February the Arab Mayor and Notables of Beisan expressed to the Assistant District Commissioner at Nazareth their regrets and horror at this murder. A reward of £500 has been offered by the Palestine Government for information leading to the arrest of the murderers, and a further reward of £1,000 has been offered for information leading to the arrest of those responsible for the murders occurring on 13th March.
It will be appreciated that it is extremely difficult to ensure security in a country where tension is so acute following on the prolonged disturbances of last year. I have, personally, discussed with the High Commission for Palestine the question of taking further measures for dealing with the increasing number of acts of violence which have recently occurred in certain parts of the country. The High Commissioner who is due to reach Palestine on Friday, 19th instant, will take up the matter in consultation with his advisers and with the General Officer Commanding the Forces as a matter of urgency on his arrival.

Colonel Wedgwood: How long will His Majesty's Government be content to go on tolerating the present state of affairs in Palestine, and when will martial law be proclaimed?

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: I do not know whether martial law is the way to deal with this matter. That is a matter for considered advice. As the right hon. and gallant Gentleman knows, we have power under an Order-in-Council which we could exercise, but, of course, that is not martial law. Martial law means the complete end of all civil government, and His Majesty's Government would be reluctant to have to resort to that.

Sir P. Harris: Is the right hon. Gentleman satisfied that these outrages are not organised by some central influence, by some power behind the scenes?

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: Yes, I think I am quite satisfied that these acts—both murders of Arabs by Arabs and of Jews by Arabs—are organised by bodies which are very local in character. They are admittedly the work of a small murder gang, and I am quite sure that these small murder gangs have no connection with the Higher Committee.

Mr. Mander: Is it not essential that, whatever may be happening in the rest of the world, we should make it clear that, so far as the British Empire and British Mandated Territories are concerned, we can and will maintain order?

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: That is certainly our intention, and I am very much surprised that the hon. Gentleman, who opposes the use of force and votes against all Forces, should put that question.

Mr. Mander: On a point of Order. Is the right hon. Gentleman entitled to make a charge against me which is entirely without foundation?

Several hon. Members: rose—

Mr. Mander: On a point of Order. May I ask for your protection, Mr. Speaker, quite seriously, against the charge—I am sure quite unintentional—. which is entirely untrue, that the right hon. Gentleman made against me?

Hon. Members: Withdraw.

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: I may have said too much, but I do not think I spoke unjustly, having regard to the hon. Gentleman's whole record in this House.

Mr. Speaker: Mr. David Adams.

Colonel Wedgwood: On a point of Order. May I ask you whether it is not

in order for hon. Members to obtain from the Front Bench opposite answers to questions which deal with the questions asked, and not for Ministers to ride off on other issues?

Mr. Speaker: Answers given are very often considered by hon. Members who ask the questions to have ridden off on other issues when they are not the answers which the hon. Members would like.

Mr. David Adams: Does the Minister believe that the presence of the High Commissioner in Palestine is likely to allay these disorders now?

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: It is quite obvious that the High Commissioner is responsible, through me, to this House for any action taken, particularly action over and above the ordinary law. He must confer with the General Officer Commanding and the Chief of Police before taking any exceptional measures, and receive any approval.

Mr. Gallacher: Will the Government, instead of considering going back to martial law, consider the advisability of going forward with the Legislative Assembly as the real remedy for the situation in Palestine?

Mr. Speaker: That question goes beyond the questions on the Paper.

TRADE AGREEMENT (IRAQ).

Mr. David Adams: asked the Secretary of State for the Colonies whether he will state the nature and duration of the new trade agreement between Iraq and Palestine?

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: I would refer the hon. Member to Command Paper 5372, copies of which may be obtained at the Vote Office. The agreement is to remain in force for three years.

BRITISH GUIANA.

Mr. Barr: asked the Secretary of State for the Colonies whether he will work out a scheme for the settlement of the hinterland of British Guiana with a view to meeting the serious overpopulation of certain West Indian islands, especially St. Vincent?

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: Such a scheme could only be worked out in consultation


between the Governments of British Guiana and of any of the West Indian Colonies to which the hon. Member refers. If a practicable scheme of this nature were put forward, I should be prepared to give it careful consideration. I am sorry to say, however, that past investigations of the interior of British Guiana have given little encouragement to the hope of any considerable agricultural development, as the greater part of the country is virgin forest of exceptional density.

INTERNATIONAL SUGAR CONFERENCE.

Sir Robert Rankin: asked the Secretary of State for the Colonies whether his attention has been called to the views of the legislative council of Jamaica that any restriction of the sugar production of that colony would render unemployment in Jamaica still more acute; and whether this matter will be given due consideration in deciding the policy to be followed by the British delegation to the International Sugar Conference?

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: I have seen a Press report of a resolution passed in Jamaica on this subject, but I have not yet received any official information. The considerations referred to will, however, be borne in mind.

Mr. Leach: Does not our sugar policy restrict the production of sugar in the West Indian colonies?

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: The present policy is not restrictive. Of course, the operation of the special preference helps indirectly.

IMPERIAL DEFENCE (COLONIAL CONTRIBUTIONS).

Sir R. Rankin: asked the Secretary of State for the Colonies whether, in view of the recent contribution of £75,000 by Nigeria towards the cost of Imperial Defence, he will consider whether it is now possible to arrange for some system by which such Colonies as can afford it should make regular contributions for Imperial Defence, with a view to avoiding the present system under which occasional voluntary contributions are made by Colonies which appreciate the importance of such assistance?

Mr. Ormsby-Gore: The system bf requiring monetary contributions from the Colonies for Imperial Defence is not one that I could properly adopt. I would point out in this connection that many of the Colonies defray the cost of local defence forces, and in some cases make a regular contribution towards the cost of their Imperial garrisons; and that consequently the contribution to Imperial Defence already made by the Colonial Empire is considerable.

Oral Answers to Questions — AVIATION.

INTERNAL AIR LINES.

Mr. Lyons: asked the Under-Secretary of State for Air whether any financial subvention has been given during 1935 or 1936, respectively, to any internal air lines in this country; the particulars of any appropriation thereof; and whether any such aid is now in contemplation?

The Under-Secretary of State for Air (Sir Philip Sassoon): As regards the first and second parts of the question, no subsidies were paid from Air Votes to internal air lines in this country during the years mentioned. As regards the last part, the report of the Maybury Committee, while recommending Government assistance in the shape of the provision of radio facilities and air traffic control, deliberately excluded the method of Government subsidies as an aid to civil aviation in this country and such direct aid is not therefore in contemplation.

Mr. Lyons: In view of the cessation of many air lines in this country during the last 12 months and the complete lack of air traffic in many air ports, including that of the city of Leicester, will my right hon. Friend take some action to see whether the internal air services in this country can be maintained and improved?

Sir P. Sassoon: That is another question.

AIRPORT SITE, FAIRLOP, ESSEX.

Mr. Lyons: asked the Under-Secretary of State for Air what progress has now been made with reference to the establishment of a central airport for London; whether the negotiations for a site at Fairlop, Essex, have been abandoned; and whether he can say when a decision may be expected?

Sir P. Sassoon: I understand that negotiations for the purchase of the site at Fairlop are still in active progress. I am, however, unable to say how soon they will be concluded.

Mr. Lyons: In view of the extraordinary delay that takes place, session after session, in coming to a decision in this matter, cannot my right hon. Friend do something to expedite a settlement; and if the transport position is regarded as being unsatisfactory, will he consider taking steps immediately to secure some more suitable site for this aerodrome?

Colonel Sir Vansittart Bowater: May I ask the Minister whether it is not recognised that Fairlop is the very best and most appropriate place at which to put this aerodrome, and is he not aware that the Corporation of the City of London are doing all they can at the present time to assist this project, but find that all sorts of difficulties are put in their way?

Lord Apsley: Can the Minister tell us what facilities there are for travelling between Fairlop and the City of London? Are they afforded by road or rail? How many minutes does it take and how many trains run per hour?

Sir P. Sassoon: The Air Ministry consider that this is a suitable site for this aerodrome. The negotiations lie entirely between the City of London and the local authorities at Ilford. As far as communications are concerned, I believe that they have not yet been supplied.

Mr. Lyons: Do any communications exist between Fairlop and the City of London?

Sir P. Sassoon: The communications will come into existence when the aerodrome does.

DE-ICING DEVICES.

Mr. Roland Robinson: asked the Under-Secretary of State for Air whether he is aware that on Tuesday, 9th March, the Imperial Airways' 9.30 a.m. Croydon to Paris service and the 12.40 p.m. service to Brussels and Cologne and similar services on British Airways were unable to leave the ground owing to the absence of de-icers, while foreign aeroplanes covering the same services and fitted with de-icers proceeded without interruption; and whether immediate action will be taken to ensure that British aeroplanes

are fitted with de-icers in order to maintain regular services in the winter months?

Sir P. Sassoon: I understand that certain British and foreign services were cancelled on the day in question because of ice-forming conditions and that other foreign services were maintained, but in view of the present stage of development of de-icing devices it would be premature to make it compulsory that they should be fitted.

Mr. Robinson: How soon will it be before British aeroplanes are made equal to Continental ones in this respect?

Sir P. Sassoon: British Airways and Imperial Airways are investigating very actively these problems, with a view to overcoming the difficulties.

Mr. Robinson: Is it not time that investigation was replaced by action?

Mr. George Griffiths: We have been telling you that for five years.

IMPERIAL CONFERENCE.

Mr. Day: asked the Prime Minister what steps the Government propose to take for the purpose of ensuring closer economic relationship between Great Britain and the British Commonwealth of Nations?

Mr. Shinwell: asked the Prime Minister whether, before the meeting of the Imperial Conference, an opportunity will be afforded hon. Members of discussing the proposals of the Government in relation to inter-Imperial trade?

The Prime Minister (Mr. Baldwin): As the House is aware, a new Trade Agreement has recently been concluded with Canada, and general trade discussions are now in progress with the Minister of Finance of New Zealand. It is proposed that at the Imperial Conference there should be a general review of the progress of Empire trade and questions arising therefrom, but that any questions arising out of the Ottawa Agreements should be dealt with as occasion offers in separate discussions between the individual Governments concerned and apart from the Imperial Conference. In the circumstances, the question of discussion in this House prior to the meeting of the Imperial Conference does not seem to arise.

Mr. Day: Will the right hon. Gentleman say whether all the self-governing dominions and the other communities will have the opportunity of discussing this matter?

The Prime Minister: I do not quite know what the hon. Member means, but I might say, in addition to what I have said in the answer, that the British Government are not putting down on the agenda any specific proposals such as the House might desire to discuss. Whether any Dominion Government will do so we do not know, but they have not put anything down as yet.

Mr. Shinwell: As regards the separate conference to discuss matters arising out of the Ottawa Agreement, does the right hon. Gentleman intend to sound the opinion of the House?

The Prime Minister: With regard to the Canadian agreement, I understand that there will be some forthcoming legislation on which that could be discussed. Any of these matters dealing with trade agreements can, I understand, be raised on the pertinent Estimates. There is no particular item on the agenda which will give the opportunity that the hon. Member desires.

Mr. Shinwell: Would not discussion on the Canadian agreement be much too narrow?

The Prime Minister: I do not really know about that.

Mr. Pilkington: asked the Prime Minister whether, in view of its importance, he will make arrangements to put the subject of emigration definitely on the agenda of the forthcoming Imperial Conference?

The Prime Minister: I fully appreciate the importance of migration within the Empire, and I expect that there will be an opportunity during the course of the Imperial Conference for exchanges of views on the subject. In many of its aspects, however, the question of migration is more suited for discussion with individual Governments than in full conference, and I do not think that there would be any advantage in proposing any more definite arrangement at this stage.

Mr. Lunn: Will the right hon. Gentleman see that there is a proper discussion between the United Kingdom Govern-

ment and the Governments of the Commonwealth on this question?

The Prime Minister: I think there probably will be. I hope there will be.

HONOURS.

Mr. Shinwell: asked the Prime Minister how many knighthoods, baronetcies, and peerages, respectively, have been created since the month of November, 1931?

The Prime Minister: The following are the figures for which the hon. Member asks. These include those granted to residents in the Dominions, India and the Colonies. They do not include appointments to, and promotions in, the various Orders of Chivalry:


Peerages
67


Baronetcies
59


Knights Bachelor
663


I see that the figures include the month of November. The hon. Member asks for them since November. I hope that that will not complicate what he wants to get at.

Mr. Shinwell: While thanking the right hon. Gentleman for appreciating my intention, may I ask him whether he would now agree that a reasonable time should elapse before any further titles are granted?

The Prime Minister: If the hon. Member were in my place he would see that he could not consider that until after the Coronation.

Mr. McGovern: How many of these titles were given to members of the Labour party, and how many applications were made by members of the Labour party?

Oral Answers to Questions — DEFENCE.

STEEL (SHORTAGE).

Lieut.-Commander Fletcher: asked the Minister for the Co-ordination of Defence whether the shortage of steel is causing delays in the Government's armaments programme, and whether the demands of that programme for steel are likely to cause restrictions upon industrial and other building programmes?

The Minister for the Co-ordination of Defence (Sir Thomas I nskip): The shortage of steel has caused delays in a


few minor cases, but they have not so far been serious, and as at present advised I have no reason to suppose that programmes as a whole will be delayed, but I am watching the position carefully.

Mr. Churchill: Is it not nearly time for the appointment of a committee on priorities in respect of this and other basic materials which gradually become a matter of competition between the armaments programme and ordinary industry?

Sir T. Inskip: My right hon. Friend must not understand that there is no machinery for dealing with priority questions.

Lieut.-Commander Fletcher: Does the right hon. Gentleman's reply refer to the latter part of the question concerning industrial and other building programmes?

Sir T. Inskip: Yes, subject to this, that if it is possible for anybody to postpone luxury building, I think that it may be in the public interest.

Mr. James Griffiths: Is not the problem of the shortage of steel partly due to the fact that Franco is diverting to Germany supplies of iron ore which used to come to this country?

Sir T. Inskip: It is impossible to answer that question with a simple "yes" or "no." Undoubtedly the diversion of iron ore supplies by anybody from this country must reduce to some extent the capacity for producing steel.

ARMAMENT MANUFACTURERS.

Mr. Rowson: asked the Minister for the Co-ordination of Defence whether there are any reciprocal agreements between armament manufacturers in this country and armament manufacturers in foreign countries; and whether he is aware that German technicians are at present employed by certain firms in this country to teach British workmen certain processes in armament manufacture?

Sir T. Inskip: In answer to the first part of the question I would refer the hon. Gentleman to what is said in the Report of the Royal Commission on the Private Manufacture of and Trading in Arms (Cmd. 5292 at page 38, and to the summary of evidence at pages 58 and 64).

As regards the second part of the question, my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for War dealt with one such case in an answer of 10th March to the hon. Member for Maryhill (Mr. Davidson), and as at present advised I have no information which enables me to add anything to that answer.

Mr. Rowson: Will the right hon. Gentleman give an assurance, now that we are in this armament race, that there will not be a repetition of the disgusting business transactions that took place prior to and during the last War?

OIL RESERVES.

Mr. Dobbie: asked the Minister for the Co-ordination of Defence whether his attention has been called to the reserves of oil being built up by the non-oil producing countries throughout the world; and whether, having regard to the increasing dependence of the industry and the national defence of this country upon oil, and the inability of commercial concerns to provide at their own expense the necessary tankage for adequate storage of reserves to meet a national emergency, he can state whether the Government intend to subsidise, guarantee, or provide the additional tankage necessary to ensure the provision for adequate reserves of oil to meet a national emergency?

Sir T. Inskip: The answer to the first part of the question is in the affirmative. Arrangements are being made for the storage of adequate reserves of oil.

Mr. Shinwell: Has the attention of the right hon. Gentleman been called to reports by experts regarding the possible exhaustion of oil reserves, and in view of those reports will he inquire into the possibility of the further production of oil from coal at home?

Sir T. Inskip: I do not know whether the hon. Member refers to the exhaustion of reserves of oil at home.

Mr. Shinwell: No, the natural reserves.

Sir T. Inskip: I am not aware of what the hon. Member is referring to, but if he will call my attention to it I shall, of course, be glad to consider it.

Mr. Dobbie: Will the right hon. Gentleman give an answer to the second part of the question?

Sir T. Inskip: I have stated that arrangements are being made for the storage of adequate reserves of oil.

LAND PURCHASES, SOUTH WALES.

Mr. J. Griffiths: asked the Minister for the Co-ordination of Defence the total area of land purchased, or leased, by His Majesty's Government for the purpose of defence work at Bridgend and St. Athan, Glamorgan; the cost of such purchase or the annual rental of such land; the total area of land owned, or leased, by His Majesty's Government at Pembrey, Carmarthenshire, constituting the site of munition works during the Great War, and the comparative cost of this site; whether the Government still own, or hold on lease, any of this land at Pembrey; and, if so, what His Majesty's Government propose to do with this site?

Sir T. Inskip: At Bridgend 1,040 acres of land have been purchased, for which a sum of £95,000 has been paid. At St. Athan negotiations are proceeding for the purchase of 88o acres of land, but as the negotiations have not yet been completed, it is not possible for me to state the cost. As regards Pembrey, the site of the old munitions factory, which covered 778 acres, was purchased for £36,210. After the War the whole of this property was disposed of, the water supply and pumping station covering four acres being sold to the Llanelly Corporation for £55,782 and the rest of the site to a private firm for £30,000. The remaining parts of the question do not arise.

Mr. Griffiths: Does the right hon. Gentleman think it in the public interest that the Government should purchase for this purpose the bit of remaining agricultural land in South Wales when there is 'abundant land nearer the Special Areas which could be used?

Sir T. Inskip: If the hon. Member is referring to the Bridgend site, it was chosen after a wide examination of all the available land in South Wales, which it was desired to help.

CALCIUM CARBIDE.

Mr. Petherick: asked the Minister for the Co-ordination of Defence the approximate stocks of calcium carbide at present held in this country; how long these stocks would last at the present rate of consumption; and whether the Government will lay in stocks for defensive purposes?

Mr. Maclay: asked the Minister for the Co-ordination of Defence (r) whether he has under consideration any plans for the manufacture of carbide in this country; and, if not, whether he proposes to initiate any inquiry regarding this question;
(2) whether, when the problem of the manufacture of carbide is being discussed by the Government, he will take adequate precautions to see that the merits of the Highlands of Scotland as a suitable locality for such a purpose are given full consideration?

Mr. Petherick: asked the Minister for the Co-ordination of Defence what action the Government intend to take in order to promote the production of calcium carbide in Great Britain?

Marquess of Clydesdale: asked the Minister for the Co-ordination of Defence whether steps will be taken before the Easter Recess to implement the pledge that the Government will forthwith take up the question how best this country should be provided with a supply of carbide and where this supply should be produced?

Sir T. Inskip: In pursuance of the statement made in this House on the 10th instant by my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for Scotland, I am now taking steps, in consultation with other Ministers concerned, to set up a small committee, composed of persons not in the Government service, to advise the Government how best the country can be provided with a supply of calcium carbide and allied products and where best that supply can be produced.

Mr. Maclay: Will the Minister bear in mind that there are very few industries for which the Highlands of Scotland are a suitable locality, and that this carbide industry is one of the few, and that if it came to the Highlands it might do something to ease the local problem of poverty and depopulation, which is arousing anxiety in Scotland?

Sir T. Inskip: I can assure my hon. Friend that the needs or the claims of Scotland will not be lost sight of when this question is fully examined.

Mr. Petherick: While thanking my right hon. Friend for his reply, may I ask


whether it will be competent for the committee to consider the imposition of a duty under the Safeguarding of Industries Act, by which a firm, if such can be found willing to set up a carbide factory in a coal area would be able to do so with safety?

Sir T. Inskip: The terms of reference which I propose will enable all aspects of this question to be considered by the committee.

Marquess of Clydesdale: Will the Minister give an assurance that the committee will be prepared to examine carefully all evidence for and against setting up the industry in the Highlands?

Sir T. Inskip: I am sure that the committee will be very anxious to receive all evidence as to the best place in which that industry can be established.

LAND ACQUISITION, RENFREWSHIRE.

Mr. Maclay: asked the Minister for the Co-ordination of Defence whether lie has considered the petition from 12 farmers in Renfrewshire petitioning on public and personal grounds against compulsory acquisition by the Government of their farm lands and means of livelihood; and what action he proposes to take with regard to the petition?

Sir T. Inskip: I have given full consideration to this petition, and I have replied to the petitioners that the proposed factory forms an essential part of the Government's defence programme, and a large area of land is necessary because of the nature of the work to be carried out. The Bishopton site was selected after the fullest examination of all possibilities and of the labour position, as being the most suitable. In these circumstances, although the disturbance of the signatories of the petition is very much regretted, the decision to acquire the land is one that must be upheld.

STORAGE (DISUSED QUARRIES).

Mr. Wakefield: asked the Minister for the Co-ordination of Defence whether he has investigated the possibilities of utilising worked-out underground slate quarries for storage purposes, and in particular for reserve supplies of munitions?

Sir T. Inskip: I can assure my hon. Friend that these possibilities have not been overlooked.

ELECTRICAL VEHICLE WORKS, LEICESTER (FIRE).

Mr. Lyons: asked the Minister for the Co-ordination of Defence whether his attention has been called to the circumstances of the fire which occurred on Saturday at the electrical vehicle works of Messrs. Partridge, Wilson, and Company, Limited, Evington Valley Road, Leicester, and the serious consequences entailed, particularly in the transformer and winding shops; and whether he can make any statement as to the delay which will be necessitated in the contracts of this firm for defence materials or to the cause of the outbreak of this fire?

Sir T. Inskip: I understand that a fire occurred in the coil winding and impregnating plant in these works but I have as yet no information regarding the cause. With regard to the last part of the question, no serious difficulty or delay in the completion of contracts for the Defence Departments is anticipated as a result of this fire.

Mr. Lyons: Will my right hon. Friend be in a position to give the cause of this fire, so far as it can be ascertained?

Sir T. Inskip: As I have said, I have as yet no information as to the cause, but if my hon. Friend desires me to inquire I will see whether I can obtain the information.

FOOD SUPPLIES.

Brigadier-General Clifton Brown: asked the Minister for the Co-ordination of Defence whether any of his committees have considered the extent to which potatoes and other substitutes for wheat could be used in our bread supply so that in time of war the import of wheat could be reduced to a minimum; and whether any steps have been taken to issue instructions on the subject?

Sir T. Inskip: Yes, Sir. Our object is to ensure the best use of all our resources, but I do not think that any instructions of this kind are necessary at the present time.

Mr. Maxwell: asked the Minister for the Co-ordination of Defence what steps are being taken by His Majesty's Government to ensure that in the event of hostilities breaking out a sufficient number of young and able-bodied men are


left in agricultural employment to ensure the safety and adequacy of home food production?

Sir T. Inskip: The question of the number of men that will be required to be left in agricultural employment for the purpose of home food production in the event of hostilities is one of the matters which is receiving the attention of His Majesty's Government. The hon. Member may rest assured that the importance of the matter is fully realised.

Mr. Maxwell: Will the right hon. Gentleman also bear in mind that if the rural population is allowed to decrease he may find difficulty in getting the increased production which he will desire when the time comes?

Sir T. Inskip: Yes, Sir, I am aware of that position.

Mr. Macquisten: Does not the right hon. Gentleman realise that if we have more of these marketing boards put on to agriculture it will die out?

Captain Heilgers: asked the Minister for the Co-ordination of Defence whether, in view of the danger of the complete destruction or contamination of growing crops and livestock by hostile air action in the event of war, he is taking steps to protect them from such risks?

Sir T. Inskip: I would refer my hon. and gallant Friend to the answer I gave to my hon. and gallant Friend the Member for Louth (Lieut.-Colonel Heneage) on 17th February.

Colonel Sir Edward Ruggles-Brise: asked the Minister for the Co-ordination of Defence the number of merchant vessels used and of naval vessels employed as escort in conveying foodstuffs to the United Kingdom in 1918; and how many in each category were British or foreign?

Sir T. Inskip: It would not be possible, without prolonged investigation, to give figures for vessels conveying foodstuffs as opposed to other imports. As regards the employment of naval vessels on escort work, the number varied considerably during 1918. In September of that year approximately 300 cruisers and armed merchant cruisers, destroyers and sloops

were employed in convoy and escort duties in the North Atlantic and home waters, and of these approximately 40 were foreign. In a dditoin, there was a large number of small auxiliary craft employed in the approaches to ports. The ships engaged on trade protection work all operated under covering support afforded by the Grand Fleet.

Sir E. Ruggles-Brise: Will the right hon. Gentleman reply to the last part of the question?

Sir T. Inskip: I answered that by saying that approximately 40 were foreign.

Sir E. Ruggles-Brise: Is the right hon. Gentleman satisfied that at present there is a sufficient tonnage of merchant vessels available, and also a sufficient number of naval vessels for escort purposes?

Oral Answers to Questions — TRANSPORT.

CO-ORDINATION.

Mr. Ridley: asked the Minister of Transport whether any proposals for co-ordinating the main transport services of the country are being considered by the Government; and when legislation for this purpose is likely to be submitted to the House?

The Minister of Transport (Mr. Hore-Belisha): No, Sir, but by the Transport Advisory Council.

Mr. Ridley: Has the attention of the Minister been drawn to a statement made recently at the annual meeting of the London Midland and Scottish Railway by its President, and has that statement the approval of the right hon. Gentleman?

Mr. Hore-Belisha: I have seen certain accounts of certain speeches, but if the hon. Member wishes to direct my attention to certain passages I would not like to say until I see them whether I agree or disagree with them.

PUBLIC SERVICE VEHICLES (LEYTON).

Mr. Sorensen: asked the Minister of Transport whether he is aware of the inconvenience caused in Leyton by irregular and inadequate transport service in the High Road; and whether he will indicate when a completely efficient service of public vehicles will operate along this thoroughfare?

Mr. Hore-Belisha: The London Passenger Transport Board do not agree that these services are normally either unduly irregular or inadequate. They expect that the tram services along the High Road will be replaced by trolley buses by the end of May next and that this will increase the accommodation available for passengers.

Mr. Sorensen: Do I understand from the right hon. Gentleman that the Transport Board have declared that there is no undue irregularity, and that therefore there has been some irregularity, in view of the fact that some buses have been taken off? Has that not led to a very great deal of inconvenience, causing many people to wait an unnecessary length of time for their ordinary means of transport?

Mr. Hore-Belisha: I have said what the Transport Board will do in the future.

Mr. Lyons: Does this tram service go to Fairlop?

TROLLEY-BUSES (LONDON).

Mr. Sorensen: asked the Minister of Transport the new routes in London along which the London Passenger Transport Board anticipates running trolley-buses during 1937?

Mr. Hore-Belisha: I have obtained a detailed list, which I will send to the hon. Member.

PETROL STATIONS (DESIGN).

Miss Cazalet: asked the Minister of Transport whether, in order to safeguard the amenities of the countryside, he will take steps to control the design and layout of petrol stations along the public highway?

Mr. Hore-Belisha: Local authorities already possess substantial powers, and on trunk roads, from the date of my becoming the highway authority, I shall certainly make suitable use of the powers which Parliament has given.

Miss Gazalet: Does the right hon. Gentleman not think that further supervision and control are immediately required?

Mr. Hore-Belisha: The local authorities have the power, and I share the hon. Lady's desire that they should use it.

ROAD SERVICE LICENCES.

Mr. Holdsworth: asked the Minister of Transport whether he will consider making regulations extending the period of validity of road service licences for services operated by stage carriages from one year to three years, so as to relieve the operators of these services of the necessity of making application to the Traffic Commissioners every year?

Mr. Hore-Belisha: Yes, Sir. I propose to make regulations to this effect.

Mr. Holdsworth: While thanking the right hon. Gentleman for his answer, may I ask if he can tell the House whether the licences in existence will be automatically extended, or whether new application will have to be made?

Mr. Hore-Belisha: I should require notice of a question relating to the details.

MINISTRY OF TRANSPORT (APPOINTMENTS).

Mr. Ellis Smith: asked the Minister of Transport whether he will cause inquiry to be made into the methods adopted by his departmental selection boards of testing and examining candidates for appointments under the Ministry of Transport with a view to instituting a more practical system of examination?

Mr. Hore-Belisha: I shall be glad to have any suggestions from the hon. Gentleman.

Mr. Smith: Is the Minister aware that candidates interviewed by one of these selection boards were asked: "What newspaper do you take? Why do you take it? What time of the day do you take it? Why do you obtain this paper in preference to other London dailies?"

FEN AREA (FLOODS).

Mr. de Rothschild: (by Private Notice) asked the Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries whether he can make any statement with regard to the floods in the Fen area?

The Minister of Agriculture (Mr. W. S. Morrison): These floods have been engaging my anxious attention during the past few days. In order to be in the closest touch with the position from day to day,


I instructed the Ministry's Chief Drainage Engineer to proceed to the area last Sunday night, and I have had daily reports from him on the situation. According to a telephone message received at 11.30 this morning, I regret to say that the position is still critical, although there was a slight fall in the water level in what is known as the South Level area in the course of last night. The whole position, however, is being closely watched both by the Great Ouse Catchment Board and all the other lesser drainage boards concerned, and all the necessary remedial measures are being taken to prevent a breach in any essential bank.

Mr. de Rothschild: While thanking the Minister for his answer, may I ask him what steps he has taken to see that all the necessary materials, labour and transport are available to the officers of the catchment board who are at the present time engaged in this work?

Mr. Morrison: All assistance that can be given is being given. I should like to add that the efforts made both by the authorities and by the inhabitants of this region, in the face of great difficulties, deserve admiration.

Mr. de Rothschild: Is the Minister aware that a great deal of voluntary work has been forthcoming from Cambridge University? May I also ask him whether he has made any arrangements for men and transport to be available from Mildenhall Aerodrome and other sources, if any need should arise for further help; whether he can assure the House that all steps are being taken to make it certain that there will be no more difficulties such as occurred last night, when a call was broadcast to all pumping stations to stop pumping within certain hours, on account of the grave danger, and when it was further broadcast that in case the message did not reach the pumping station people in the neighbourhood should carry the message to the pumping stations; and whether it is not very important that some communication should be established between the central authority and these pumping stations on this vital matter?

Mr. Morrison: I am aware that voluntary effort has been forthcoming in very generous degree, both from Cambridge University and from other sections of the population. The detailed arrangements

necessary for combating these exceptional circumstances are a matter for the local authorities concerned, and in so far as I can assist them I will certainly do so. I am satisfied that every step that the circumstances render possible is being taken at the present time to combat this grave situation.

Captain Briscoe: Is there any fund at the Minister's disposal to avert a major disaster, and is he quite sure that no necessary action is prevented locally owing to lack of funds?

Mr. Morrison: Yes, Sir. I think that is true, but I do not think that money, at this particular moment, could do very much more to aid the situation. I may say that we have always regarded this area as an exceptional one and the grants made by the Ministry to the catchment board have been correspondingly generous; 75 per cent. in the case of the last two schemes put forward. I am able to say that any other scheme put forward by the catchment board which has been approved will receive the same generous contribution from national resources.

Mr. R. C. Morrison: In view of the grave importance of this matter, will the right hon. Gentleman consider the suggestion that he should approach the War Office to obtain the assistance of some members of the Royal Engineers to hold themselves in readiness to give their services in this district?

Mr. W. S. Morrison: I will gladly look into the suggestion, and if it is of value I will adopt it.

Captain Heilgers: In view of the fact that Mildenhall Aerodrome is almost immediately adjacent to these floods will the Minister consider using not only transport, as suggested by the hon. Member for the Isle of Ely (Mr. de Rothschild), but personnel?

Mr. Morrison: If that suggestion will help, I will certainly do so, but I am not aware that there is any lack of personnel available, due to the generous response made by the inhabitants and other people.

BUSINESS OF THE HOUSE.

Mr. Attlee: May I ask the Prime Minister what progress he expects to make with business to-day?

The Prime Minister: The Motion for the appointment of a Select Committee to consider the Civil List will be taken first; then we shall move the Second Reading of the Merchant Shipping (Spanish Frontiers Observation) Bill and take the Committee stage of Vote A of the Air Estimates. I understand that the discussion on the Committee stage of that Vote will be formal, the Debate taking place on the Report stage on Monday. The Committee stage of a formal Ways and Means Resolution will also be taken. If

there is time before Eleven o'clock after this business has been disposed of, we shall take the Second Reading of the Statutory Salaries Bill.

Motion made, and Question put,
That the Proceedings on Government Business be exempted, at this day's Sitting, from the provisions of the Standing Order (Sittings of the House)."—[The Prime Minister.]

The House divided: Ayes, 271; Noes, 114.

Division No. 113.]
AYES.
[4.34 p.m.


Aoland, R. T. D. (Barnstaple)
Crowder, J. F. E.
Hore-Belisha, Rt. Hon. L.


Acland-Troyte, Lt.-Col. G. J.
Cruddas, Col. B.
Home, Rt. Hon. Sir R. S.


Adams, S. V. T. (Leeds, W.)
Culvorwell, C. T.
Howilt, Dr. A. B.


Agnew, Lieut.-Comdr. P. G.
Davies, Major Sir G. F. (Yeovil)
Hudson, Capt. A. U. M. (Haok., N.)


Allen, Lt.-Col. J. Sandemun (B'kn'hd)
Davison, Sir W. H.
Hudson, R. S. (Southport)


Allen, Lt.-Col. Sir W. J. (Armagh)
De la Bere, R.
Hunter, T.


Anstruther-Gray, W. J.
Denman, Hon. R. D.
Inskip, Rt. Hon. Sir T. W. H.


Apsley, Lord
Doland, G. F.
James, Wing-Commander A. W. H.


Assheton, R.
Dower, Capt. A. V. G.
Jarvis, Sir J. J.


Astor, Hon. W. W. (Fulham, E.)
Duckworth, Arthur (Shrewsbury)
Keeling, E. H.


Alholl, Duehess of
Duckworth, W. R. (Moss Side)
Kerr, H. W. (Oldham)


Baldwin, Rt. Hon. Stanley
Dugdale, Major T. L.
Kerr, J. Graham (Scottish Univs.)


Barclay-Harvey, Sir C. M.
Duggan, H. J.
Keyes, Admiral of the Fleet Sir R.


Barrie, Sir C. C.
Duncan, J. A. L.
Kimball, L.


Baxter, A. Beverley
Dunglass, Lord
Knox, Major-General Sir A. W. F.


Beauchamp, Sir B. C.
Eden, Rt. Hon. A.
Latham, Sir P.


Beaumont, Hon. R. E. B. (Portsm'h)
Edmondson, Major Sir J.
Law, Sir A. J. (High Peak)


Bennett, Sir E. N.
Elliot, Rt. Hon. W. E.
Law, R. K. (Hull, S.W.)


Bernays, R. H.
Ellis, Sir G.
Leech, Dr. J. W.


Birchall, Sir J. D.
Elliston, Capt. G. S.
Leigh, Sir J.


Bird, Sir R. B.
Elmley, Viscount
Lennox-Boyd, A. T. L.


Bossom, A. C.
Emery, J. F.
Lewis, O.


Boulton, W. W.
Emmott, C. E. G. C.
Liddall, W. S.


Bowater, Col. Sir T. Vanslttart
Emrys-Evans, P. V.
Llewellin, Lieut.-Col. J. J.


Bowyer, Capt. Sir G. E. W.
Entwistle, Sir C. F.
Lloyd, G. W.


Bracken, B.
Erskine-Hill, A. G.
Looker-Lampson, Comdr. O. S.


Braithwaite, Major A. N.
Evans, D. O. (Cardigan)
Loftus, P. C.


Briscoe, Capt. R. G.
Evans, E. (Univ. of Wales)
Lovat-Fraser, J. A.


Brocklebank, C. E. R.
Everard, W. L.
Lumley, Capt. L. R.


Brown, Col. D. C. (Hexham)
Findlay, Sir E.
Lyons, A. M.


Brown, Rt.-Hon. E. (Lelth)
Foot, D. M.
Mabane, W. (Huddersfield)


Brown, Brig.-Gen. H. C. (Newbury)
Fox, Sir G. W. G.
MacAndrew, Colonel Sir C. G.


Browne, A. C. (Belfast, W.)
Fremantle, Sir F. E.
MoCorquodale, M. S.


Burgin, Dr. E. L. Burton, Col. H. W.
Furness, S. N.
MacDonald, Rt. Hon. J. R. (Scot. U.)



Ganzoni, Sir J.
MaoDonald, Sir Murdoch (Inverness)


Campbell, Sir E. T.
George, Major G. Lloyd (Pembroke)
Macdonald, Capt. P. (Isle of Wight)


Carver, Major W. H.
George, Megan Lloyd (Anglesey)
MoEwen, Capt. J. H. F.


Cary, R. A.
Gibson, C. G. (Pudsey and Otley)
McKie, J. H.


Castlereagh, Vitcount
Gilmour, Lt.-Col. Rt. Hon. Sir J.
Maclay, Hon. J. P.


Cayzer, Sir C. W. (City of Chester)
Gluckstein, L. H.
Maonamara, Capt. J. R. J.


Cazalet, Thelma (Islington, E.)
Glyn, Major Sir R. G. C.
Macquisten, F. A.


Cazalet, Capt. V. A. (Chippenham)
Goldie, N. B.
Magnay, T.


Channon, H.
Gower, Sir R. V.
Maitland, A.


Chapman, Sir S. (Edinburgh, S.)
Grant-Ferris, R.
Makins, Brig.-Gen. E.


Christie, J. A.




Churchill, Rt. Hon. Winston S.
Granville, E. L.
Mander, G. le M.



Gretton, Col. Rt. Hon. S.
Manningham-Buller, Sir M.


Clarke, Lt.-Col. R. S. (E. Grinstead)
Gridley, Sir A. B.
Margesson, Capt. Rt. Hon. H. D. R.


Clydesdale, Marquess of
Griffith, F. Kingsley (M'ddl'shro, W.)
Mason, Lt.-Col. Hon. G. K. M.


Colman, N. C. D.
Grigg, Sir E. W. M.
Maxwell, Hon. S. A.


Colville, Lt.-Col. Rt. Hon. D. J.
Grimston, R. V.
Mayhew, Lt.-Col. J.


Cooke, J. D. (Hammersmith, S.)
Gritten, W. G. Howard
Meller, Sir R. J. (Mitcham)


Cooper, Rt. Hn. A. Duff (W'st'r S. G'gs)
Guest, Hon. I. (Brecon and Radnor)
Mellor, Sir J. S. P. (Tamworth)


Cooper, Rt. Hn. T. M. (E'nburgh, W.)
Guy, J. C. M.
Mitcheson, Sir G. G.


Courtauld, Major J. S.
Hamilton, Sir G. C.
Morris-Jones, Sir Henry


Courthope, Col. Sir G. L.
Harbord, A.
Morrison, Rt. Hon. W. S. (Cirencester)


Cranbormi, Viscount
Harris, Sir P. A.
Munro, P.


Craven-Ellis, W.
Haslam, H. C. (Horncastle)
Neven-Spence, Major B. H. H.


Croft, Brig.-Gen. Sir H. Page
Heilgers, Captain F. F. A.
Nicolson, Hon. H. G.


Crooke, J. S.
Herbert, A. P. (Oxford U.)
O'Connor, Sir Terence J.


Crookshank, Capt. H. F. C.
Hills, Major Rt. Hon. J. W. (Ripon)
O'Neill, Major Rt. Hon. Sir Hugh


Croom-Johnson, R. P.
Holdsworth, H.
Owen, Major G.


Cross, R. H.
Hope, Captain Hon. A. O. J.
Palmer, G. E. H.


Crossley, A. C.
Hopkinson, A.
Patrick, C. M.




Peaks, O.
Russell, S. H. M. (Darwen)
Tasker, Sir R. I.


Peat, C. U.
Salmon, Sir I.
Tate, Mavis C.


Perkins, W. R. D.
Salt, E. W.
Taylor, Vice-Adm. E. A. (Padd., S.)


Peters, Dr. S. J.
Samuel, M. R. A.
Thomson, Sir J. D W.


Petherick, M.
Sandeman, Sir N S.
Touche, G. C.


Pickthorn, K. W. H.
Sanderson, Sir F. B.
Train, Sir J.


Pilkington, R.
Sandys, E. D.
Tree, A. R. L. F.


Pownall, Lt.-Col. Sir Assheton
Sassoon, Rt. Hon. Sir P.
Tufnell, Lieut.-Commander R. L.


Radford, E. A.
Seely, Sir H. M.
Turton, R. H.


Ramsay, Captain A. H. M.
Selley, H. R.
Wakefield, W. W.


Ramsbolham, H.
Shakespeare, G. H.
Walker-Smith, Sir J.


Ramsden, Sir E.
Shaw, Major P. S. (Wavertree)
Warrender, Sir V.


Rankin, Sir R.
Simon, Rt. Hon. Sir J. A
Waterhouse, Captain C.


Rathbonc, Eleanor (English Univ's.)
Sinclair, Rt. Hon. Sir A. (C'thn's)
Watt, G. S. H.


Rathbone, J. R. (Bodmin)
Smiles, Lieut.-Colonel Sir W. D.
Wayland, Sir W. A


Rayner, Major R. H.
Smith, L. W. (Hallam)
Wedderburn, H. J. S.


Reed, A. C. (Exeter)
Smith, Sir R. W. (Aberdeen)
White, H. Graham


Reid, Captain A. Cunningham
Somervell. Sir D. B. (Crewe)
Wickham, Lt.-Col. E. T. R.


Reid, Sir D. D. (Down)
Somerville, A. A. (Windsor)
Williams, H. G. (Croydon, S.)


Reid, W. Allan (Derby)
Southby, Commander A. R. J.
Wilson, Lt.-Col. Sir A. T. (Hitchin)


Roberts, W. (Cumberland, N.)
Stanley, Rt. Hon. Lord (Fylde)
Windsor-Clive, Lieut.-Colonel G.


Robinson, J R. (Blackpool)
Storey, S.
Womersley, Sir W. J.


Ropner, Colonel L.
Strauss, E. A. (Southwark. N.)
Wright, Squadron-Leader J. A. C.


Ross Taylor, W. (Woodbridge)
Strauss, H. G. (Norwich)
Young, A. S. L. (Partick)


Rowlands, G.
Strickland, Captain W. F.



Ruggles-Brise, Colonel Sir E. A.
Stuart, Lord C. Crichton (N'thw'h)
TELLERS FOR THE AYES—


Runeiman, Rt. Hon. W.
Stuart, Hon. J. (Moray and Nairn)
Sir George Penny and Lieut.-


Russell, A. West (Tynemouth)
Sueter, Rear-Admiral Sir M. F.
Colonel Sir A. Lambert Ward.


Russell, R. J. (Eddisbury)
Sutcliffe, H.





NOES.


Adams, D. (Consett)
Hall, G. H. (Aberdare)
Potts, J.


Adamson, W M.
Hall, J. H. (Whitechapel)
Quibell, D. J. K.


Alexander, Rt. Hon. A. V. (H'lsbr.)
Hardie, G. D.
Richards, R. (Wrexham)


Ammon, C. G.
Hayday, A.
Ridley, G.


Attlee, Rt. Hon. C. R.
Henderson, A. (Kingswinford)
Rowson, G.


Banfield, J. W,
Henderson, J. (Ardwick)
Sanders, W. S.


Barnes, A. J.
Henderson, T. (Tradeston)
Sexton. T. M.


Barr, J.
Hollins, A.
Shinwell, E.


Batey, J.
Hopkin, D.
Short, A.


Bellenger, P. J.
Jagger, J.
Silverman, S. S.


Benson, G.
Jenkins, A. (Pontypool)
Simpson, F. B.


Bevan, A.
Jenkins, Sir W. (Neath)
Smith, Ben (Rotherhithe)


Brooke, W.
John, W.
Smith, E. (Stoke)


Brown, C. (Mansfield)
Jones, A. C. (Shipley)
Smith, Rt. Hon. H. B. Lees (K'ly)


Buchanan, G.
Kennedy, Rt. Hon. T.
Smith, T. (Normanton)


Cape, T.
Leach, W.
Sorensen, R. W.


Charleton, H. C.
Lee, F.
Stephen, C.


Chafer, D.
Leonard, W.
Stewart, W. J. (H'ght'n-le-Sp'ng)


Cluse, W. S.
Leslie, J. R.
Strauss, G. R. (Lambeth, N.)


Cocks, F. S.
Logan, D. G.
Taylor, R. J. (Morpeth)


Cove, W. G.
Lunn, W.
Thome, W.


Cripps, Hon. Sir Stafford
Macdonald, G. (Ince)
Thurtle, E.


Caggar, G.
McEntee, V. La T.
Tinker, J. J.


Davidson, J. J. (Maryhill)
MoGhee, H. G.
Viant, S. P.


Davies, R. J. (Westhoughton)
McGovern, J.
Walkden, A. G.


Day, H.
MacLaren, A.
Walker, J.


Dobbie, W.
Maclean, N.
Watkins, F. C.


Ede, J. C.
MacNeill Weir, L.
Watson, W. MoL.


Edwards, A. (Middlesbrough E.)
Mainwaring, W. H.
Welsh, J. C.


Edwards, Sir C. (Bedwellty)
Mathers, G.
Westwood, J.


Fletcher, Lt.-Comdr. R. T. H
Maxton, J.
Wilkinson, Ellen


Gallacher, W.
Messer, F.
Williams, T. (Don Valley)


Gardner, B. W.
Morrison, R. C. (Tottenham, N.)
Wilson, C. H. (Attercliffe)


George, Rt. Hon. D. Lloyd (Carn'v'N)
Muff, G.
Windsor, W. (Hull, C.)


Green, W. H. (Deptford)
Noel-Baker, P. J.
Woods, G. S. (Finsbury)


Greenwood, Rt. Hon. A.
Paling, W.
Young, Sir R. (Newton)


Grenfell, D. R.
Parker, J.



Griffiths, G. A. (Hemsworth)
Parkinson, J. A.
TELLERS FOR THE NOES —


Griffiths, J. (Llanelly)
Pethick-Lawrence, F. W.
Mr. Whiteley and Mr. Groves.


Question put, and agreed to.

GREAT WESTERN RAILWAY BILL.

Rear-Admiral Sir Murray Sueter: At the time of Private Business to-day, when the Great Western Railway Bill was called, many Members called out "Object," both here and in other quarters of the House. May I ask you, Mr. Speaker, whether that Bill went through?

Mr. Perkins: I was one of those Members who shouted "Object" as loudly as I could. May I ask whether it is in order for the Clerk at the Table to push a Bill of this nature through against the obvious wish of the House?

Mr. Speaker: I cannot allow the hon. Member to cast a reflection on the Clerks


at the Table. As regards the point raised by the hon. and gallant Member for Hertford (Sir M. Sueter), I heard some objections raised before the Title of the Bill was read out, but after it had been read out at the Table I heard no objection, and I concluded that those objections had been withdrawn.

Lord Apsley: I was one of those Members who objected. I heard objections coming prematurely from the other side of the House, and I did not myself object then, but when the Clerk at the Table read out the Title of the Bill I did call out "Object" quite loudly, and I heard other Members on this side object, too.

Mr. Lyons: I desire to associate myself with what my Noble Friend has just said. The objection was put beforehand and also at the proper time.

Mr. Speaker: We cannot go back on what we have already done. If it is desired to raise any further objection, it can be done on the Third Reading.

ESTIMATES.

First Report from the Select Committee brought up, and read.

Report to lie upon the Table, and to be printed.

LONDON AND NORTH EASTERN RAILWAY BILL.

Reported, with Amendments, from the Committee on Group B of Private Bills (with Report on the Bill).

Bill, as amended, and Report to lie upon the Table; Report to be printed.

THE LATE SIR AUSTEN CHAMBERLAIN.

3.54 p.m.

The Prime Minister (Mr. Baldwin): It is the practice of this House, before proceeding to the ordinary and sometimes contentious business, on an occasion when we have lost one of our most distinguished Members, to pause for a moment, and for the whole House as a House to pay tribute to that man's life and work. A most painful duty has fallen to my lot on more than one such occasion, and I would indeed that I could have been spared this duty to-day.
It is just 29 years since I entered the House, and on that occasion I had a letter from Austen Chamberlain, whom I knew slightly, and had known slightly for some years, asking if he, as the representative for East Worcestershire, might have the pleasure of introducing me to this Chamber. I need not tell the House with what gratitude I, a young and unknown Member, accepted that compliment from one who had already held high office as Chancellor of the Exchequer. He introduced me, and from that day till now I have had nothing but kindness and consideration from him through all the changes and chances of political life; and, though there was a brief period when there was between us a fundamental difference of opinion, that, I rejoice to think to-day, never affected the regard we had for each other, a regard which, I believe, existed on his side as it did on mine. Though there will be one speaking later in this Debate whose knowledge of him goes back many years before that time, I felt that I must just strike that personal note before I say what I have to say about him. During that period, of course, our relations changed. At one time I sat supporting him on the back benches, and then ultimately he was Foreign Secretary in the Government that I formed in 1924, where no man could have had a more loyal and true colleague than he was, and where he accomplished work for which, I believe, history will give him the credit which I always feel he has scarcely had yet.
Austen Chamberlain was, I think, above all, a very great Parliamentarian. He loved this House. He loved the life of it. He was trained to it. He lived in it, and he has died in it, as I think he would have chosen to do. He was

equipped for his task at all points. He was brought up in a hard school, at a time when political controversy was raging with an intensity that, in these more calm days, we find difficult to realise; and he learned to play his part among the most effective of those on the bench where he worked. He was always a formidable figure in debate, courteous and chivalrous, but capable of giving hard blows and capable of receiving them. There was never in his whole composition, even through those bitter years before the War, anything of malice, anything underhand; he was the open, chivalrous foe when fighting had to be done, and he never flinched and never lost his courage. I think the whole House was proud of him as a type of a great Parliamentarian. It will seem to all of us the poorer now that we shall never again see him in his place.
It is remarkable to think that, great as his political career was, and numerous as were the great offices which he held, it was during the last years of his life that he exercised in this House a far greater influence than he had ever exercised before. I attribute that partly to this. It is never easy to grow old, but he passed from the position of an active and administrative statesman to the position of what is now called an elder statesman in an extraordinary way. He gradually seemed to drop that partisan character which is essential to some extent to those who are fighting on the Front Benches in the House of Commons, and he displayed prominently those gifts of candour and wisdom which were his. While always ready to criticise if he felt that criticism was necessary, he never criticised for the sake of criticism, and you always felt that, if you had his approval, it was the approval of that honest mind of his, while, if you had not, you might well search yourself to see what you had done to merit it. Many of us, of course, often felt, in listening to him and seeing him, that he was one among us as though he had come from what we sometimes think of as the great days of Parliamentary tradition. We felt that when he left us—and we prayed it might be long before he did so—there would be no one who could take his place. I know that that is often said of men, but with him it is true. He has passed away. Yet, do not let the House misunderstand me. Although he was


that, and although in so many ways he loved the old ways, and was faithful to them in that studied courtesy of his, in the style of his eloquence, yet there was no man who had a profounder sense of the organic nature of Parliament and confidence in its ability to meet all the changes and chances of life in this country for centuries yet to come.
There is no young man in this House but would say that one of his most remarkable and lovable characteristics was his interest in and his kindness to young men. No one would ever go to him to consult him on any point without his taking the keenest interest in what they were interested in. To no one did it give greater pleasure to hear a young man make a good speech. No one was looking out more eagerly in every quarter of the House to see the men on whose shoulders, in his opinion, the mantle of the great men of the past might descend. His pride in this House, his belief in its capacity, was life long. As we know, his conversation used often to turn to the incidents of his younger life in this House. So in these latter days there was no one of the older ones among us to whom I could appeal with more confidence on questions as to how the House of Commons might regard certain actions and certain proposals, or how to deal with a difficult situation. His judgment in those matters was generally unerring and it was always at the disposal of his friends.
It is for history to relate the accomplishments of our great men and it is for the Press of the day to give the facts and the details of their lives. But here we dwell for a short period on the man we knew, and if, indeed, our words spoken here to-day should live at all, they will live for the instruction of those who come after us, to show how a sudden and swift blow could affect the hearts and minds of those who sat with him for so many years. If I wished in a word or two to sum up his characteristics I would say that his chief characteristic may be summed up in that well known line:
He reverenced his conscience as his king.
Among the things most deeply embedded in that conscience was a sense of loyalty. That is a word which is used in many senses and is often on men's lips. In Austen Chamberlain I would say that it

was the supreme and unshakeable loyalty to everything that he honestly believed to be right and believed to be the best. It was a loyalty that was shown to his family, to his party, to the House of Commons and to his country; and whether it be colleagues, whether it be friends, whether it be relations, whether it be the Members of the Civil Service who gave their service to him in those many capacities in which he served—each and all I think would mark out that loyalty as perhaps the most outstanding characteristic of his. I have never known him let a man down; he was always prepared to take the blame and always prepared to shoulder responsibility.
There is one other characteristic which his friends will recognise, and again I would quote a well known line which may be found quite close to the one I quoted a few minutes ago:
He spoke no slander, no, nor listened to it.
I have known him intimately, and I have never heard him say anything about anyone—mainly, of course, in discussing political matters, when feelings often run high—I have never heard him say anything derogatory about a man or anything on hearsay or rumour. Not only that, he was one of those rare men who are incapable of listening to anything of the kind that anyone may desire to put before them. It was the reflection of a singularly simple and candid nature, in its best and truest meaning. One remembers, and always will remember those two things, the loyalty not only in action in big things, but loyalty of thought and word where so many of us go wrong. He has left us. In the remote parts of that countryside where I was born and where old English phrases linger, though they may now be dying, even now I hear among those old people this phrase about those who die "He has gone home." It was a universal phrase among the old agricultural labourers, whose life was one toil from their earliest days to their last, and I think that that phrase must have arisen from the sense that one day the toil would be over and the rest would come, and that rest, the cessation of toil, wherever that occurred would be home. So they say, "He has gone home."
When our long days of work are over here there is nothing in our oldest customs which so stirs the imagination of the


young Member as the cry which goes down the Lobbies, "Who goes home?" Sometimes when I hear it I think of the language of my own countryside and my feeling that for those who have borne the almost insupportable burden of public life there may well be a day when they will be glad to go home. So Austen Chamberlain has gone home. The sympathy of this House from the heart of every one of us will go out to those who are left. The relationship of father and son is not a thing on which I shall touch here, except to say that no more beautiful relationship ever existed. In all his domestic relationships it was the same—with his wife, with his brother. There is not a soul in this House but will give that sympathy from the bottom of his heart. For us the best thing we can do to honour his memory is to cling more closely to the two things to which he clung throughout his life. He always maintained that public service was the highest career a man could take. In that belief he fitted himself for it and in that belief he worked and died. Let us renew our efforts from to-day to take further pride in this work to which we have been called.
As I said earlier, he had an infinite faith in the Parliamentary system of this country. Let us resolve once more that we can best keep his memory bright by confirming our own resolution that government of the people by the people shall never perish on this earth.

4.13 p.m.

Mr. Attlee: It is difficult to add anything to the beautiful and moving tribute which the Prime Minister has paid to one who was the friend of us all in this House. I desire to express, on behalf of the Members of my party and myself, our sincere sorrow at the loss which this House and the country has sustained by the death of Austen Chamberlain. This House has lost in him one of its most distinguished Members, a great House of Commons man, a devoted servant to his country, a kind and courteous and generous man. For nearly 45 years he has played a leading part in our public life. He was one of the few who link us with bygone times, one of the last links with the Gladstonian era. When most of us in this House who now take part in these Debates were still at school, he was already a Minister of

the Crown. He became Chancellor of the Exchequer at an early age and for very many years he has taken a very high place in the councils of this country. When the history of the 20 years that lie on each side of the great War comes to be written, his name will stand out as that of one of the great protagonists in our political life. In the party controversies of the pre-War era, those controversies that seem to be far off from us today, controversies over Home Rule, the Budget and the rest, he took his full share as one of the leaders of a great political party. During the War he shared in the heavy burdens of Government until, from scruples that were characteristic of him, he resigned office.
After the War he entered on a new phase of his career. He had the task, as Foreign Secretary, of dealing with the tangled problems of a world which had passed through a terrible ordeal, and he became a great international figure. The work that he did in his life, whether they were acts which were wise, whether they were acts which he afterwards thought less wise, will be judged by posterity. There will be no doubt, however, as to his single-minded devotion to what he thought was right. Whether one agreed or disagreed with him in the policies that he advocated in foreign affairs, there can be no doubt as to his sincere desire for peace. I would particularly recall his constant endeavour to make personal contact with the leading statesmen of Europe so that by that personal understanding difficulties might be removed. I recall the work that he did for the League of Nations. I think, perhaps, most of us in the House will remember him best for his work during those last few years when, having laid aside all ambition, he occupied a position of detachment. He was, as it were, almost above the battle and, when he spoke to us from the wealth of his experience on those occasions, it seemed to me sometimes that he voiced most truly the opinion of the country. I recall the long hours of work that he gave on the India Committee.
Above all, I think I would recall his personal relations with Members of this House, to whatever party they belonged. He was always generous and always kindly. The strokes that he delivered in Debate never left any ill feeling behind. I recall the kindness that he showed me on many occasions. When I had to


undertake work which was rather difficult for me, he generously gave a word of encouragement, which meant a great deal to a young Member from one of his great experience. I think the Prime Minister was right in recalling the close touch that he kept with young Members and the interest that he took in their successes. We shall all miss his presence. We shall look across and see for a long time that empty seat on the other side of the House. We shall assure his widow and his family of our very deepest sympathy in their great loss.

4.19 p.m.

Sir Archibald Sinclair: I should like in a few words to associate my hon. Friends and myself with the eloquent tributes which the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition have paid to the memory of Sir Austen Chamberlain. His achievements in the service of his country, the great offices of State which he held, his struggle for peace and understanding between the nations of the world after the storm and fury of the War, his championship of freedom and democracy—all these things will be recorded in history—but we shall remember him with pride as a great Commoner, a stalwart party man, tenacious of his principles, frank and outspoken in Debate, but a generous opponent and, in all that vast field in which we in this House work together, and which lies outside the bounds of party controversy, a loyal colleague and a true friend. He taught us that courtesy, and even punctiliousness do not detract from but add to the trenchancy and effectiveness of Debate. His dignity was of the essence of his style, yet no man was less prone to assert it or to resent the criticism of an opponent, for in Debate he loved, and was wont to prompt others to enjoy, the full rigour of the game.
We think to-day of his family with grief and sympathy, heightened by a sense of the tragic conjuncture of events in the life of one of them who is also our colleague. But, in mourning his loss, we who are Members of this House may find some source of pride and consolation in the reflection which occurred to both the right hon. Gentlemen who preceded me, the reflection that, after spending most of his life in great public offices and enjoying world renown as a statesman, it was in the last few years that he

attained to the summit of his power and influence as a Parliament man sometimes rallying the supporters of the Government to its defence; at other times inspiring Members from the back bench where he sat to assert the authority of Parliament over the executive. May his example long inspire those who come after him to cherish that high ideal of Parliamentary duty and responsibility of which he was the accomplished, faithful and unselfish servant.

4.23 p.m.

Mr. Lloyd Georģe: I rise to associate myself with the very eloquent and tender words uttered by the Prime Minister, and the tributes which have been paid by other speakers. I should also like to associate myself with the expressions of sympathy with Sir Austen Chamberlain's family. I have only one claim to make any contribution to this Motion, and that is that I knew the late Sir Austen Chamberlain from the beginning of his career in this House right to the end, when I saw him walk down there for the last time last week. He was in this House for 45 years. He came in two years after me. Mr. Balfour was then a young man just promoted to the Leadership of the House. There were two outstanding figures in the House of Commons. One was Sir Austen's father, Mr. Joseph Chamberlain, a man of unsurpassed force and dynamic power. The other was Mr. Gladstone, who had served in the same administration as the Duke of Wellington. He was then leading the Opposition and was on the eve of his fourth Premiership. That was 45 years ago.
I heard Sir Austen's maiden speech delivered, as far as I can recollect, from that seat which is now vacant. It was a characteristic speech, faultless in matter and in style. I also remember that historic salutation, when he sat down, from Mr. Gladstone, who was the greatest Parliamentary orator of his day, and who, turning to Mr. Joseph Chamberlain, his redoubtable antagonist, congratulated him upon having listened to a speech which would be dear to a father's heart. It was a memorable occasion. During most of the 45 years that he was in the House with me we sat on opposite sides, and we crossed swords times out of number. He led the Opposition to all my Budgets, and I remember more


particularly one of the Budgets which happened to be more controversial than the others. He and I fought night after night from May till late in December. We were here at all hours of the day and night, often till broad daylight. It is difficult for Members who have only entered the House of Commons since the War to realise what the Parliamentary struggles were before the War, as the Prime Minister pointed out, and the subdued party cries of to-day when one compares them with the ferocities of those days. But, although Austen Chamberlain led many attacks, right in the front, he never once delivered a foul blow. He was the fairest and most chivalrous as well as one of the most effective of Parliamentary antagonists.
I served also with him in two administrations as a colleague in probably the greatest crisis which has ever befallen this country and the British Empire. So I am one of those who have been able to observe him from two angles, as an opponent and as a comrade, and it is difficult to know which is the severer test for a man. All I can say is that those who have observed him in both capacities—and I am one of them—say unhesitatingly that Austen Chamberlain emerged from both trials without a shadow of doubt upon his loyalty and integrity. He was one of those men who, when a proposition was put before him, never thought of asking the question, "What do I get out of it?" There was only one question that he always asked of his judgment and his vigilant and sensitive conscience "Is it right?" He was a man who strained the point of honour always against himself, and there is no public man of our time who sacrificed more to integrity, to honour and to loyalty to friends, to his party and to his country.
When I heard last night, after nine o'clock, the news of his sudden death, I heard it with a pained shock. He and I fundamentally differed on a great many things, but we were always friends; and sudden death is a blow unto the heart. But I was not alone. There were millions of men who heard it last night and who read it this morning who were sorry because a man who gave them confidence in the working of democratic institutions has for ever disappeared from the watchtower. It is meet that this great assem-

bly, representing now a united people, should do honour to this man of honour who has passed away.

Mr. Maxton: I rise, not because I think that I can add anything to what has been said, but it has so often been my lot to rise here and utter dissent on matters on which otherwise there is a unanimous House, that I feel that, on this occasion, it is my bounden duty to rise and say that in this quarter of the House there is no dissent from the sentiments that have been uttered.

CIVIL LIST.

4.44 p.m.

The Prime Minister: I beg to move,
That a Select Committee be appointed to consider His Majesty's Most Gracious Message of the 16th March relating to the Civil List and to Provision for Her Majesty the Queen and for Members of the Royal Family and other matters connected therewith.
The House, I am sure, will understand why to-day I am rising to move the Motion which should have been moved by my right hon. Friend the Chancellor of the Exchequer. It will be within the recollection of the House that a similar Motion was moved and explained only a short 12 months ago, but I would like just to repeat the explanation, and to say one or two words on what passed in the House that day. The House will be aware that it is customary at the beginning of a new Reign that provision should be made for the maintenance of the honour and dignity of the Crown. The Government of the day put before the Select Committee which we are asking the House to appoint to-day—the names which are on the Order Paper form part of the formal Motion—their own proposals, and the Committee make a thorough examination of those proposals, and prepare a report to be submitted to the House. After that, the House will be given an opportunity for full discussion of the Committee's proposals.
A point was raised last time by the right hon. Member for South Hackney (Mr. H. Morrison) and, to open the discussion, if I remember rightly, he moved an Amendment, which was subsequently with drawn, asking that the Committee might have power to send for persons, papers and records. It was pointed out to him and to the House by the Chancellor of the Exchequer that the


form in which the Motion had been put was the form in which it always had been put when action had to be taken. I think that he recognised that there was an occasion when there was some difficulty in getting all the information required, but that was many years ago. The Chancellor of the Exchequer gave an undertaking, which I will read to the House. He said:
He thought it was proper that the Committee should have all the information they might reasonably require, and he had no hesitation in giving the most unqualified assurance that such evidence and such documents as the Committee might require would certainly be made available to it.
I give the same assurance to-day. I feel confident that the Committee, most of whose members are still Members of the House, will acknowledge that all the information that was desired by anyone during the sittings of the Committee was given and examined, and I think that we all of us, members of all parties, when that examination was concluded felt that we had been able to go thoroughly into every point that it was desired to consider, and that no information that we wished to have had been withheld. The Committee received a great mass of details a year ago. They took oral evidence from the Keeper of the Privy Purse, the Financial Secretary to the King, the Receiver of the Duchy of Cornwall, the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, the First Commissioner of Works, and one of the Under-Secretaries of the Treasury. Certain accounts were published for the use of the House, but the oral evidence was not published. These are the reasons why I am moving the Motion that was made by the Chancellor of the Exchequer a year ago, and I commend it to the House. The Committee will be prepared to start their sittings very shortly after they are so authorised by the House.

4.49 p.m.

Mr. Buchanan: The reason why we on this bench intend to refrain from voting is because we take the view that when the Civil List comes up we shall oppose it in almost every detail. I rise mainly so that it shall not be thought we are in any way agreeing to any item in the Civil List, and that in not opposing the setting up of the Committee we are in any way committed to anything that will appear in the Civil List. When it comes before

the House we shall be free to oppose any and every item in it. If our numbers had been larger we should almost certainly have divided against the appointment of the Committee. We take the view that in these matters the House is drifting again into an impossible situation in many respects, an utterly impossible situation. I do not want to go back through all the past history with which we dealt a year or so ago, but we were then drifting and to-day we seem to be drifting again into an indefensible situation. While we shall not divide on the appointment of the Committee to-day, we shall take our share in the House in opposing any or almost every recommendation that the Select Committee may make in the Civil List. I do not want it to be thought that either my colleagues or myself are in any way committed.

4.51 p.m.

Sir Arnold Wilson: I rise to ask the Prime Minister whether he can give the House an assurance that the Select Committee will feel itself free to consider the question of Civil List pensions? These pensions, as the Chancellor of the Exchequer explained last year, are not in fact borne on the Civil List, but the name "Civil List pensions" has been by custom for exactly 100 years connected with them. These pensions have added renown to the Crown by reminding the public that it has always been His Majesty's pleasure so to exercise his Royal benevolence. The exiguous pensions were acceptable largely because of their association with the Monarchy. The average annual cost for the past 10 years is £23,000, allotted in the form of £1,200 of new money, a sum unchanged since the Act of 1837 made provision for pensions to
such persons only as have just claims to the Royal beneficence, or who, by their personal service to the Crown, or the performance of duties to the public, or by useful discoveries in science and attainments in literature or the arts, have merited the Gracious consideration of their Sovereign and the gratitude of their country.
I do not seek to attempt to elaborate the case made last year by the senior Member for Oxford University (Mr. Alan Herbert). I simply ask for an assurance that, although these pensions are technically borne by the Consolidated Fund and not by the Civil List, the Select


Committee can consider the question of an increased allocation, should they see fit to do so.

The Prime Minister: In answer to my hon. Friend I may say that I cannot pledge the Committee. It all depends on what the Committee decide to do, but the Government have no objection to this matter going before the Select Committee if the Select Committee should think fit to consider it. That is as far as I can go to-day.

Ordered,
That a Select Committee be appointed to consider His Majesty's Most Gracious Message of the 16th March relating to the Civil List and to Provision for Her Majesty the Queen and for Members of the Royal Family and other matters connected therewith.

Ordered,
That the Paper presented this day relating to the Civil List be referred to the Committee

Ordered,
That the Committee do consist of Twenty-one Members.

Committee accordingly nominated of,—The Prime Minister, Sir Irving Albery, Mr. Amery, Mr. Attlee, Sir Ernest Bennett, Mr. Benson, Sir George Bowyer, The Chancellor of the Exchequer, Mr. Churchill, Colonel Sir George Courthope, Brigadier-General Sir Henry Croft, Mr. Lloyd George, Mr. Greenwood, Major Hills, Sir Robert Horne, Mr. Lambert, Sir Hugh O'Neill, Mr. Pethick-Lawrence, Mr. Simpson, Sir Archibald Sinclair, and Earl Winterton.

Ordered,
That Five be the quorum."—[The Prime Minister.]

Orders of the Day — MERCHANT SHIPPING (SPANISH FRONTIERS OBSERVATION) BILL [Lords].

Order for Second Reading read.

4.55 p.m.

The Parliamentary Secretary to the Board of Trade (Dr. Burgin): I beg to move, "That the Bill be now read a Second time."
The Government ask to-day that the House of Commons shall give legislative effect to a piece of machinery necessary to carry out an international agreement made on 8th March, to which this country is a party. The House will understand that Spain, by far the larger part of the Iberian Peninsula, has a frontier of some 300 miles to France by land and a frontier to Portugal of some 400 miles by land, while its sea coast is roughly 1,600 miles in length. If I add the one further geographical fact that the Straits of Gibraltar are approximately eight miles across, the House will see that the problem of dealing with any trouble which may begin in Spain is largely one of marine patrol. The policy of the Government with regard to the disturbances in Spain is one of non-intervention. Nonintervention carries with it two further ideas—the refusal to allow to go to Spain as far as this country is concerned ammunition or volunteers. It is now, and always was, illegal for a British subject to take part in the war in Spain. By the Carriage of Munitions to Spain Act, of December last year, it was made illegal for a British ship to carry a cargo of munitions of war to a Spanish destination.
An international scheme involving the shutting off from Spain of munitions and volunteers from different nations must, if it results in anything, represent the greatest measure of common agreement that can be procured at any one time. I shall call attention in a moment to the terms of the international scheme, which are set out fully in the White Paper, Command Paper 5399. That scheme, agreed to on 8th March, places upon the countries that are contracting parties an obligation to impose certain requirements upon their mercantile marine. Hon. Members will find that throughout the White Paper. I will quote at random. On page 9, paragraph To (d) it is provided that:
The participating Governments will issue any instructions which may be necessary to require any owners and masters"—
to do certain things. This country, having given its assent to the international scheme on 8th March, is now called upon to implement the obligations under that scheme falling upon this country by promoting legislation in Parliament to confer the necessary powers and impose the necessary obligations.
What are the main proposals of the international scheme? It is a scheme assented to by 27 different countries. The particulars are set out in Command Paper 5399. In addition to having made it illegal to carry munitions of war to Spain, and in addition to having made it illegal to enlist for service in the armies on either side in Spain, a system of control is to be set up, a system of supervision. Not only will it be the law that a vessel shall not go to a Spanish destination with a certain cargo, not only will it be the law that certain people may not embark as passengers on these ships, but it will be the law that vessels going to a Spanish destination shall submit to a form of supervision and control.
The plan adopted is something like this. A British vessel—we are a British Parliament legislating for the British Mercantile Marine—shall not leave for a Spanish destination without being under the obligation to call at a specified port of call where, on her arrival, she will be assigned observation officers. These observation officers are embarked on board the British ship and are given powers to interrogate the master and passengers, and to inspect the cargoes and packages on board. They will also have the duty of seeing whether the vessel is carrying any volunteers who ought not to be going to Spain. Obviously, you cannot compel vessels of the Mercantile Marine engaged in their lawful business of carrying cargoes to Spanish destinations which are not prohibited by law, to deviate from their course and put into some port, obey the orders of some administrator, or to take on board certain observation officers not of their own choice or nationality. You cannot compel them to give these observation officers all kinds of powers on board ship, expect the ship to victual them, to carry them throughout their short journey, and after having discharged their cargo at their destination take back these observation officers to some port and disembark them. You cannot impose obligations of that kind by voluntary agreement; you have to make an alteration in your Merchant Shipping Law and the Bill which is now before the House, a short Bill of four Clauses, is destined to give power to the Board of Trade to implement the obligations which the country accepted when it signed the international scheme.
The House will see at once the sort of problem which arises. The scheme involves not merely that the ships of the Mercantile Marine are to be obliged to call at these intermediate ports and take up these observation officers, to submit to questions and examination, but certain powers of naval control are also conferred on ships of war of certain countries in another part of the Bill. Before I go into detail on the Bill I think the House should understand the broad problem confronting the Board of Trade which is charged with the administration of a Measure of this kind. Deviation, expenses, delays, the possibility that a cargo may be unpacked in order to detect whether or not an offence has been committed and, if at the end there is found to be no offence, then the cargo has to be re-packed, are all matters which touch shipowners, charterers, merchants, buyers and sellers of commodities in many parts of the world, and the business of the Board of Trade in presenting this legislation for approval is to see that so far as it is possible in a measure of this kind the necessary safeguards are taken so that the interference with legitimate trade is reduced to a minimum, so that the defence which lawyers now enter under the name of "Restraint of Princes" may not be wider or greater than the occasion demands. That is the framework of the Bill which is submitted to the House for approval. Before hon. Member's plunge into the details there is one further statement which should be made, a statement to which great importance is attached. It will be observed that in Clause 4 (5), the Bill is to come into force:
on such date as the Board of Trade may by order appoint, and different dates may be appointed in relation to different ships and different provisions of this Act.
It is in the contemplation of His Majesty's Government that in the event of the Bill becoming law it will not be brought into force until the principal maritime countries trading with Spain have adopted similar legislation. I want the House to understand that we are imposing on our nationals handicaps, obligations and expenses, all kinds of duties, but it is not the intention that they should be unilateral. It is our intention to implement the promise we have given by signing the international scheme, but it is our intention, when the Bill is passed, that it shall only be brought into


effective operation simultaneously with the adoption of like measures by the principal maritime countries which have business with Spain. I think I can assume that hon. Members are familiar with the broad outlines of the scheme, but I want to call their attention to the fact that there has been a change since the White Paper was printed. In the annex to the resolution it is provided that the system of observation is to be administered on behalf of the participating governments by a Board to be known as the International Board for Non-Intervention in Spain, and this Board is to consist of a chairman and five members nominated by the representatives of the five Governments which are set out in the annex. Since the White Paper was printed there has been a change in the constitution of the International Board, and it is now intended to consist of a chairman and eight members. Three new countries are to have the right of appointing representatives, Greece, Norway and Poland.
The scheme of observation will necessarily involve zones and catering for the different kinds of traffic coming from different parts of the world. There is the traffic coming through the Straits of Gibraltar, the traffic coming from the North Sea and the English Channel, the traffic coming in from the West, from South Africa and from South America. These different types of traffic approach some port on the 1,600 miles of Spanish coast line from different points of the compass, and are provided for by elaborate arrangements in the scheme itself. Hon. Members will find on page 10 of the White Paper the different ports which are assigned as the ports at which administrators are to have their being, their offices, to which vessels are to apply for observation officers to be assigned to them. The House will find that the maritime geography has been well worked out and that, broadly speaking, these are ports which are self-indicated; they are the ports indicated on these different routes as the normal places to which vessels would put even if they did not have to submit to such a scheme as this. The chief administrator will be either in the Downs or at Dover, and arrangements may be made whereby British vessels will be able, if proceeding from home waters, to have their principal con-

tact with the chief administrative officer in the Downs.
The House will understand that the traffic proceeding to a maritime country like Spain may be of more than one kind. There are a number of lines regularly engaged in traffic with Spain. Obviously vessels which are engaged on outward and homeward journeys to regular ports in Spain are in a different category from British vessels loaded expressly for a Spanish destination. It will be possible for shipowners who come within the category of regular vessels proceeding to Spanish ports to make what may be called a long-term arrangement, and, if necessary, to have an observation officer permanently on board their vessel. Again the Board of Trade is trying to reduce to a minimum the amount of inconvenience which is to be caused to the Mercantile Marine in performing these international obligations. Arrangements will be made at the outset of the scheme, when the number of observation officers available may be insufficient to meet the requirements, for vessels to be notified that it will be useless to proceed to a given port for observation officers because they do not exist at the port should she arrive there, and in such an event the vessel will no longer be under the obligation to make that useless journey. But the intention, and it is marked in plain terms throughout the scheme, is to make this a practical working arrangement within the limits it is possible to make an international agreement with 27 countries a practical working arrangement. It cannot be described in full terms as a contractual obligation, and such an arrangement may not be procurable in agreement between a large number of countries working with different objectives, but within the limits of this scheme it is desired to have a sensible working arrangement under which the administrators will carry out their work. Vessels will, as far as possible, be franked from harbour dues when they put into ports to which they were not intending to go, and the observation officers will be given the necessary powers to carry out their duties, including the power to send messages with priority once they are on board and desire to make a report.
That is the broad outline of the scheme. There are two other features which should


be mentioned. One is that waters adjacent to Spanish territory mean 10 miles off the coast. We are not talking here of a narrow legal definition of territorial waters; we say that a vessel which comes within 10 sea miles of the Spanish coast at any point is proceeding to waters adjacent to Spanish territory.
I would like the House to understand at the outset of this discussion that it is not contemplated that there shall be any interference with vessels proceeding to or from the Canary Islands. The Canary Islands belong to Spain, but they are so far from the mainland that the danger of movements of volunteers from the Canary Islands to the mainland is not grave. The large number of vessels—liners, cruising vessels and others—calling at the Canary Islands merely for a short period of time to disembark a small amount of cargo or a small number of passengers is wholly disproportionate to the risk of there being anything wrong in traffic in that part of the world. At the outset of the scheme, therefore, it is not proposed to regard the Canaries as falling within Spanish territory.
If at any time good cause is shown why the Canary Islands traffic should be included. there is power, by Order, to amend the scheme and include them. I do not want the House to be under any false impression in debating the Bill. It is not proposed to apply the provisions to the ordinary traffic to and from the Canaries, one of the reasons being that homeward bound grain vessels from the Plate not infrequently called at the Canaries for bunkering and if we were to place upon the ordinary general traffic obligations of complying with this scheme, we should drive those vessels away from the Canaries to some other bunkering place where equal facilities would perhaps not be available and thus do quite unnecessary harm to the bunkering interests in the Canaries.

Sir Stafford Cripps: Does that cover traffic from the Canaries to Spain?

Dr. Burgin: It does not for the moment apply, except in the sense that if a vessel leaves Great Britain intending to call at the Canary Islands and then go to a Spanish destination, it is a British vessel proceeding to a Spanish destination, and comes within the operation of the scheme.

Sir S. Cripps: Suppose there were a service running between the Canaries and Spain direct, would that come within the scheme?

Dr. Burgin: Perhaps the hon. and learned Gentleman will allow me to make perfectly certain about that. I understand he is asking about British vessels.

Sir S. Cripps: Certainly.

Dr. Burgin: I am not sure offhand whether there is any such service. I am endeavouring at the moment to explain the proposition rather than to argue in favour or against it, and I wanted to make it quite clear that, whereas normally the Canary Islands would fall within what is regarded as Spanish territory, for the purposes of this Bill, they are, at the commencement, to be left outside. The hon. and learned Gentleman will appreciate that the answer to his question is that to such a service this Bill would apply, because there would then be a British ship leaving port for a Spanish destination, and in so far as the voyage was from a port in the Canary Islands to the mainland of Spain, that outward voyage would certainly come within the scheme. That being the framework within which this Bill is intended to operate, perhaps the House will be good enough to turn to the Bill itself.
Hon. and learned Members particularly will understand something of the difficulties of dealing with anything as nebulous as an International Board for Non-Intervention in Spain. That board, intended to consist of a chairman and the eight representatives of the countries to which I have referred, will have above it the Non-Intervention Committee and will have below it an International Council for Non-Intervention in Spain. Hon. Members will understand that the scheme contemplated in the Bill, the Second Reading of which I am now moving, will involve receipts of money, payments of money, claims for the recovery of money, claims by shipowners against somebody representing the authority, and will involve a number of transactions for which it is desirable to have a legal entity. Consequently, the House will be interested to know that the Government contemplate that there shall be set up in the United Kingdom a company of limited liability which will


be the legal entity representing the International Board for Non-Intervention in Spain and being the authority referred to in Clause 4 (3, b), where there is a reference to "the authority" which means:
such body as may be certified by the Board of Trade to be the body entrusted by the International Board for Non-Intervention in Spain with the functions of the authority under this Act or, if no such certificate is given, the said International Board.
I think the House will feel that what is in essence a mercantile marine programme ought to be worked out under the considerable control of the Board of Trade, and I think it will be felt to be a measure of assurance that there is to be a limited liability company, incorporated under English law, which will be a legal person in every sense of the word and which will be the authority for the purpose of the administration of this Act.

Sir S. Cripps: What will be the assets of that limited liability company?

Dr. Burgin: There will be such assets as the Governments concerned consider are necessary to fulfil their obligations. Broadly speaking, it will be a legal framework working out the wishes of the executive, the executive being the International Board, and he executive working out the wishes of the general meeting, the general meeting being the Non-intervention Committee.

Sir S. Cripps: The hon. Gentleman envisaged the possibility of someone bringing an action against this company. What assets would be available to anybody bringing such an action?

Dr. Burgin: The cost of the whole of these operations, how that cost is to be provided and contributed by the various Governments are obviously matters to which I must refer before concluding my observations, and if it meets the convenience of the House I will refer to them now. It is intended that five Governments shall contribute 16 per cent. each, and that the remaining 20 per cent. shall be contributed by the other 22 countries represented on the Committee. The five Governments are the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. Those five countries will find between them 8o per cent. of the cost, and the remaining 20 per cent. will be contributed by the

other countries in certain agreed proportions. The House will recollect that there are concerned 27 countries, of varying degrees of wealth. The total cost of the scheme of observation, assuming it were continued for the full period of 12 months, is estimated to be £834,000, so that the hon. and learned Gentleman will see that the assets which will be at the disposal of this legal body will represent such sum of that gross contribution as remains to its credit at any particular moment.

Sir S. Cripps: Am I to understand that the legal entity will hold the whole of these subscriptions from the various countries in Great Britain, and that the similar company in France will have no assets with which to meet the claims of French citizens? Will Great Britain hold all the money available for claims by British shipowners?

Dr. Burgin: I do not want the hon. and learned Gentleman to understand that. I will find out what proportion of that sum is to be held in cash in Great Britain, but as we are here dealing with obligations, I think we need not fear a lack of assets to meet claims. The British Government's contribution will be made from the Civil Contingencies Fund and will be borne under a special subhead of the Diplomatic and Consular Vote, and there will be a Supplementary Estimate presented to the House as soon as possible in the financial year. I think I have dealt with the question of costs. I was anxious that the House should understand the importance which the Board of Trade attach to the idea of a limited company. Perhaps the House will bear with me for a moment or two while I deal with the provisions of the Bill. The Bill has four Clauses, and almost all the operative provisions which concern the Mercantile Marine of this country are contained in Clause 1, which reads:
No ship to which the Merchant Shipping (Carriage of Munitions to Spain) Act, 1936 (hereinafter in this Act referred to as' the Act of 1936')"—
I think that the definition of British ships will be within the recollection of the House—
applies and which is bound to a port or place in Spanish territory shall enter any waters adjacent to Spanish territory unless she has first proceeded to the prescribed place and there embarked such observing officers as may be deputed in that behalf by the administrator at that place.


In this connection, perhaps hon. Members will refer to paragraphs 10, II, 12, 13, 18, 19 and 20 of the White Paper. Let me again make it clear that the Bill is a piece of machinery, that the machinery is to implement the scheme and that therefore the details are to be found in the scheme and not in the Bill. The Bill, being machinery, is drafted largely in the form of conferring on the Board of Trade power to make regulations to apply the Act. The British vessel is not to proceed to waters adjacent to Spanish territory without going to a neutral port first for the purpose of embarking observing officers. There follow some provisos. Regard must always be had to the stress of weather, and other things which may compel the vessel to do things which are beyond the control of the master or owner, and in such an event the vessel is not deemed to have committed the offence of breaking Clause 1. Clause 1 (4) says that it shall be a misdemeanor not to comply with the provisions of the Clause, and very substantial penalties are incurred. The words of the proviso are: "By stress of weather or any other circumstance which neither the master nor the owner of the ship could have prevented or forestalled." These words are taken from previous Acts of Parliament and are not specially designed for this Bill. They are the right words in legal language to indicate circumstances beyond control. There follows a second proviso giving power for the substitution of some other port for the prescribed port and a third proviso deals with the possibility that there might not be, at a given moment, enough observation officers to warrant a vessel going into a particular port on a particular voyage. In such circumstances the administrator may notify, if necessary by wireless, the fact that the vessel concerned is exempt from calling at that port on that voyage.

Mr. Aneurin Bevan: Is it intended that the legislation which is being passed by other interested maritime Powers shall be on similar lines to this Bill?

Dr. Burgin: The obligations under the White Paper are definite, and the countries concerned are to implement their obligations by their own legislation under this scheme. So far, the Irish Free State is the only country that has actually passed its legislation, although I have no

doubt that other countries are in process of introducing such legislation. I am afraid I cannot say, however, what form that legislation will take. It is obviously necessary, if you are putting in force a scheme with the possibilities which attach to this scheme, to contemplate various emergencies and we must take into account that certain ports may not be as fully equipped as others in this respect.

Mr. Bevan: Do I understand that in the case of a ship sailing from a German port for Spain, or waters adjacent to Spain, the German authority, established under their own legislative enactment, can wireless that ship and say, "In our opinion there is a shortage of gfficers at the port of call, and you may proceed to your destination without taking any officers on board"?

Dr. Burgin: I follow the hon. Member's point. He will understand that the chief administrator and the administrators in the various ports are appointed by the International Board and that Germany, to take his own example, has not the right to appoint a particular administrator at a particular port. The administrators are servants of the Non-Intervention Committee—of the International Board—and they will be employed probably by the limited company to which I have referred. At any rate, it is not open to any Government to insist that at any port there shall be an administrator of its own nationality and thus the hon. Member's point does not arise. I do not want to blink the fact that it may be possible for an administrator of any nationality to show favouritism. It is fervently to be hoped that such considerations do not arise in international affairs, but I do not wish the House to assume that I am blind to the possibility that such things may require a tightening of the law. At the same time, if hon. Members follow the White Paper they will see that there are provisions for tightening, amending or modifying the scheme and just to the extent to which the scheme itself is tightened, amended or modified so must there be power in the Board of Trade to tighten, amend or modify the legislation implementing it.

Mr. Noel-Baker: There is a provision that the administrator must immediately report to the higher authority by whom he will certainly be called to account if he has been showing favouritism.

Dr. Burgin: I am grateful to the hon. Member for calling the attention of the House so vividly to this point which emerges from the White Paper. That is the fact, but I did not want it to be assumed that there was no possibility, temporarily, of a vessel being improperly franked for a particular voyage. All the way through the wish of the Board of Trade is that the administration of this legislation should be made practicable and that is why I shall have to ask the House to give an unusual power to a Government Department—the power of amending the Act. It will be found that nothing short of such a provision gives the Board of Trade the powers which will be necessary to keep pace with an international scheme which is it self susceptible of amendment. The Clause goes on to say that the vessel having these observing officers on board shall proceed to the prescribed place taking the shortest available route and shall disembark the officers who have been taken on board. Power is given to the administrator if the port named does not suit the vessel to appoint a more convenient port. The House will see that there are circumstances in which Palermo, for instance, which is in Sicily and a long way off might be inconvenient for certain vessels and in which it would be more convenient to have a port nearer hand. There is, then, the provision as to failure to comply with the Act being a misdemeanour. Sub-section (5) is one to which I would call special attention. It gives owners of regular steamers on regular routes the power to make something in the nature of long-term contracts, to carry their observation officers with them.

Miss Wilkinson: If it is easy for any administrator to choose another port instead of one of the prescribed ports, why put in these prescribed ports at all? There does not seem to be any point in it.

Dr. Burgin: You must have centres at which to have this machinery. Broadly speaking, these administrators will be equivalent to members of the Diplomatic Corps and will be given diplomatic immunity and diplomatic privileges. It is necessary to select the places where these officers with the necessary services will be established and you choose the most convenient ports. When a ship

has discharged its cargo and landed its passengers and, therefore, has no further use for the observation officers, you want to have them disembarked, and the scheme contemplates that they shall be disembarked at particular ports. But it might well be that, without doing any harm to anybody, the administrator could by agreement with the master of the vessel concerned arrange for an alternative port. I think the hon. Lady will find, on looking into the matter in greater detail, that such an arrangement will be for the convenience of shipping. I do not think there is anything further in Clause 1 to which I need call atention.

Mr. Bevan: Is it not an exceedingly small penalty?

Dr. Burgin: It is the ordinary penalty for a misdemeanour. Clause I (5) provides that if any ship fails to comply, the master of the ship shall be guilty of a misdemeanour and the owner of the ship shall also be guilty of a misdemeanour if he is privy to the failure to comply. That does not mean an exceedingly small fine. It means liability to imprisonment. If it is a case in which the fine would be too or under it has to be dealt with summarily. It is, broadly speaking, the old offence of a misdemeanour with all the liability to punishment which it involves. The Act is to be construed as one with the Merchant Shipping Acts, and under Section 680 of the Act of 1894 a misdemeanour is punishable by fine or by imprisonment not exceeding two years, with or without hard labour, and the case must be tried summarily where the fine cannot exceed £100. So it is optional on the prosecution how they shall deal with a particular offence.

Mr. Bevan: If the offender is a German or Italian we do not know what the punishment will be.

Dr. Burgin: We are dealing here with British ships, British masters and British owners. The offence of a German or Italian must be an offence under German or Italian legislation, and I cannot take the responsibility of expounding the probable course of legislation in other countries. It is better, I think, to proceed with our own legislation and to make it such that other countries may be pleased to copy it. We proceed to Clause 2, which deals with an entirely


different set of circumstances and considerations from those involved in Clause I. It deals with the question of naval supervision and control. I would refer hon. Members to page 13 of the White Paper:
In order to ensure that the procedure … shall be duly observed a system of naval observation will be established around the Spanish coasts. The duty of naval observation will be undertaken by the Governments of the United Kingdom, France, Germany and Italy. For the purpose of naval observation the Spanish coasts will be divided into zones.
Then follows a list of names of capes on the Spanish coasts which are to mark the zones. I do not think any point arises on that which need detain us, but if questions do arise later in the Debate or during the Committee stage, they will be dealt with then. I ask the House to give attention to Clause 3. It is intended to serve two distinct objects. In the first place, the scheme contemplates the possibility of arrangements being made, with the consent of all the Governments concerned, on a number of outstanding questions. For instance, no decision has yet been reached as to whether a vessel which is merely disembarking observation officers should pay harbour dues when she goes into a port for that purpose. It is hoped that an agreement will be reached among the contracting countries by which ports will forego their dues when vessels call in pursuance of obligations under this legislation. It is also contemplated, as I have said, that the scheme which we are implementing may itself be subject to modification. Clause 3 deals with the possibility of keeping abreast with such modifications. Further, it will be seen from the scheme that arrangements for the constitution of focal areas may be brought into operation. It may be necessary to say that vessels proceeding in a certain direction shall pass through a given area, in order to make naval supervision more practicable. For instance, the Straits of Gibraltar being eight miles across, any vessel passing through them must be within 10 miles of the Spanish port. The Straits, therefore, provide a first-class focal area for vessels passing East or West, in or out of the Mediterranean. It may be necessary to institute similar areas on other parts of the Spanish coast. Clause 3 will enable that system to be applied to British vessels by Order in Council.
I want the House to follow closely the explanation of the fact that the Government feel it necessary to ask for power to amend the Act. It is a power for which Ministers are naturally slow to ask, and which the House, naturally, may be rather jealous of giving, and it would not be proper to ask for it unless the exigencies of the case so required. I suppose that those who are in business will agree with me when I say that more companies have failed from lack of capital than from any other cause, and they will also agree that the worst thing one can do is to give an agent a power of attorney so badly drawn that it does not give him power to do the very thing he is wanted to do. It is no use implementing a scheme which contains within itself powers of alteration and amendment, if the Act by which you implement it, leaves you powerless to follow suit with amendments subsequently made in that scheme.
So this Clause, an unusual one, requiring special justification, gives to the Minister power to amend this Act by Order in Council and power to amend any enactment relating to merchant shipping. I am deliberately calling attention to the extent of the power which we are asking, because nothing short of it will enable you to implement changes in the scheme itself which it is probable will be brought into force. An hon. Member says, "Why not limit this Bill to what we have got already and bring in another Bill when necessary," and so on ad infinitum? No, Sir, the Government do not think that that is a practical way to lead to the settlement of international disputes. We think that having secured an agreement between 27 countries over such a large field of debatable and difficult territory, it would be very wise to take power now, by Order in Council, to amend this Act, though only to the extent to which it is necessary to keep pace with Amendments of the scheme itself. You cannot tell whether the powers that the scheme may require us to take would conflict with some other Act relating to the mercantile marine, and so we must have power not only to amend this Act, but to amend any Merchant Shipping Act which would otherwise make it impossible to carry out those powers.
In order to realise that this is an unusual power, the Bill goes on to say that


you shall adopt the procedure that is adopted in the Import Duties Act. An Order in Council is made, and the Government act upon it, but that Order in Council has to have an affirmative Resolution of both Houses of Parliament within a given period of time. It is necessary to give the Government power to act immediately, otherwise you would defeat the whole object of your international cooperation, but at the same time we come to the House as soon as practicable within the normal period of time and procure an affirmative Resolution.

Miss Wilkinson: May we allude to this particular Clause as the Avoidance-of-Criticism Clause?

Dr. Burgin: The hon. Lady is entitled to use such language as she thinks fit, but this has not anything to do with the avoidance of criticism at all. The difficulty is that if you have an Act of Parliament which recites, to begin with, that whereas there is a scheme, that whereas the scheme imposes certain duties, and that whereas to fulfil those duties it is necessary to alter the law, and the scheme itself contains power that it should be amended, your whole law will be stultified by an Amendment by the Non-Intervention Committee, and you will be obliged to begin all over again. Instead of doing that, you have here the very sensible power, by Order in Council, to enable you to amend the powers that are given to you by this Act to the extent to which it is necessary to bring them into line with the scheme which you are desiring to implement, and in order that there may be no possible mistake about the matter, you undertake to bring that Order in Council before the House of Commons, for an affirmative Resolution, at the earliest possible moment.

Sir S. Cripps: Will the hon. Gentleman point out the provision for the Amendment of the scheme?

Sir Robert Young: Are we taking steps to secure that these alterations of the law shall not be permanent?

Dr. Burgin: It is provided expressly in the last Clause of the Bill, in Sub-section (6):
This Act shall continue in force until His Majesty by Order in Council is pleased to declare that it is no longer necessary or expedient that it should continue in force,

the idea being that this is entirely temporary and that the length of the Act must be consistent with the length of the scheme.

Sir R. Young: Would that include any alteration in the Merchant Shipping Act?

Dr. Burgin: Certainly. The hon. and learned Member for East Bristol (Sir S. Cripps) asked where the scheme has power to amend. Paragraph (5) of the Resolution of 8th March, 1937, says the agreement is to be carried out "unless otherwise amended or determined."

Sir S. Cripps: But it has not been, as I understand, "otherwise amended or determined."

Dr. Burgin: The 8th March is very recent, but it is being sought to be amended or determined in various ways. The Non-Intervention Committee is having before it new problems of this character, and the system of blocking holes and making the whole scheme as watertight and workable as possible is not a matter of taking an official determination but is a continuous preoccupation of all the Members of that Committee. Clause 4 of the Bill merely contains the definitions, and unless some hon. Member has any point on it which does not occur to me now, I think the Clause is self-explanatory.

Mr. Bevan: Can the hon. Member explain why the Non-Intervention Committee arrived at the agreement at all? Can he tell us how they arrived at the allocation of zones?

Miss Rathbone: The hon. Member has already explained to us that the appointed day will not be appointed until the other countries concerned have passed similar Resolutions, but I would like him to tell us whether he was then expressing the present intention of His Majesty's Government or intending to give the House a definite assurance that the Bill would not be brought into force, because otherwise the Government might change their mind and it might be another instance of nonintervention by example.

Dr. Burgin: I am grateful to the hon. Lady for enabling me to make quite clear what I had intended to do earlier. I had intended to give the Government assurance already given by the Under-Secretary of State in another place, and I


give it categorically to this House. It is the intention that the Board of Trade shall not name an appointed day and bring this legislation into operation until the principal maritime countries having business with Spain adopt similar provisions.

Mr. David Adams: Who is to be the judge as to whether the respective countries concerned have in fact passed similar legislation? Is the Board of Trade to be the judge?

Dr. Burgin: Yes, His Majesty's Government is to be the judge, and it is a matter on which we are singularly competent. The hon. Member for Ebbw Vale (Mr. Bevan) asked how the zones were selected. It is a pure matter of marine geography. If the hon. Member would take a large-scale map of Spain, he would see that, proceeding westward from France and running towards the Atlantic, there is a very natural sub-division to a particular cape. He would find that from that particular cape to the commencement of the Portuguese frontier, there was again a very well-defined allotted area, with ports and harbours within it and none just outside it. He would find then that from the southern frontier of Portugal there is a very natural zone from the Straits of Gibraltar to Cape de Gata, and so on round the coast of Spain, with Northern Morocco, with the Balearic Islands, he would find that it all divides itself almost into automatic channels.

Mr. Bevan: We have two matters before us, the scheme of the Non-Intervention Committee and the Bill implementing it. I have not got a map before me, but will the hon. Member say in what area Malaga comes?

Dr. Burgin: I am most anxious, as I hope have tried to convince the House, to be their servant and assistant in this matter. We are dealing with a complex state of affairs, but we are dealing with a White Paper which is extremely important and which gives a great deal of information. Besides taking the definite channels into which this coastline naturally divides its zones, the International Committee allotted to the various Naval Powers the supervision of given zones, and the allocation to the United Kingdom is the zone at the North of Spain, broadly speaking from the

Pyrenees almost to the Western borders of the Province of Oviedo-Cape Busto. In point of fact it is from about the sixth degree of latitude to the first. travelling eastward. That is the area allotted to the United Kingdom. The hon. Gentleman asked where Malaga came. Malaga comes within the area from the coast of Portugal to Cape De Gata, which is known as Zone C, and Zone C is allotted to the United Kingdom. Thai: stretch of water, which includes the Straits of Gibraltar, is almost naturally indicated as being one of those which should be policed and controlled by ourselves. The result is that the extreme North, being the easiest of access for us, and the extreme South, being the regular passage through which the greater number of British vessels ply, are alike allotted to the United Kingdom. I think that gives the explanation that I wanted to give in presenting the Bill to the House. I invite the House to give the Bill a Second Reading, because it represents a clear piece of machinery to which we are committed already by the signature given to the international scheme adopted on 8th March.

5.57 p.m.

Mr. Noel-Baker: The Parliamentary Secretary to the Board of Trade has moved the Second Reading of this Bill with a patience for which every one must be grateful, and I should like to start by congratulating him and all the authors of the scheme which this Bill is to apply, and which the White Paper explains, on the extraordinary ingenuity which they have used. If the machinery which they propose were actually set up, if it were to function and were to produce the results for which they hope, it would indeed be a striking example of an international mechanism that succeeds. We would welcome now, as we would always have welcomed at any moment, measures which were designed and which we thought were likely to make the Non-Intervention Agreement a working reality. We have never been against the policy called non-intervention, provided it were made equally effective to both sides in the civil war. We have only objected to unilateral action; to a system which, in our opinion, has become a one-sided sham which in practice is an extreme form of intervention against the Government of Spain.
I am delighted that the Government on this occasion do not propose unilateral action, and I wonder whether they could not apply their new principle to the whole of their policy in this matter. I agree with the Minister that this Bill has a good many merits, which he has explained so well that I do not propose to devote any more time or attention to them at all. I am glad to note one particular change in the original scheme which he mentioned, namely, the addition of two representatives of smaller Powers to the International Board. The experience of the League of Nations has always proved that the addition of smaller Powers to the Council of Great Powers adds a great deal of moral authority to the work which is done.
Having said these things, I go on to say at once that we view this scheme as a whole with doubt and, indeed, with grave misgiving. We feel no certainty that it will achieve the purpose which it has in view. We fear that it may itself become the instrument of grave injustice against the people and the Government of Spain. We consider that it requires amendment in some parts of vital importance, and that there are some conditions without the fulfilment of which the operation of the scheme will be dangerous in the extreme. I will indicate what those amendments and conditions are in a moment. Happily, as the Minister explained, amendments can be made. Although I do not think the Opposition ever likes to give the Government power to amend without coming to Parliament, yet if our proposed amendments were accepted and carried through, some of us would be willing for this purpose to aloes that power to amend. In any case, we press upon the Government that, whatever is done in this House, they should themselves in the Non-Intervention Committee urge at the earliest possible moment certain amendments to this scheme before irreparable errors have been made.
To explain our attitude, and the changes in the system now proposed which we would like to see, I am afraid I must go back into the history of the civil war in Spain, trying to repeat as little as possible what I, at least, have said in earlier Debates. On 18th July last Spain was a member of the League of Nations. She was in normal diplomatic relations with

every important country, with the exception, I believe, of the Soviet Union. Thus, if Spain were involved in warfare, her rights in international law were determined by these two facts. First, if she were the victim of foreign aggression she was entitled to receive from the 55 other members of the League whatever help against the aggressor Article 16 may be held to afford. If I understand the Government, they themselves admit that Article 16 implies at least the full and automatic application of economic sanctions against the aggressor. Second, if a civil war broke out, the Government, being in diplomatic relations with other Powers, was entitled to receive from those Powers the treatment which the practice of international custom over a period of centuries has established as law. The practice in modern times has mostly been in America, owing to the habit of Latin-American republics to embark on revolutions from time to time. It follows that the United States Government have had much more experience than anyone else, and in 1930 they made a declaration on the subject which I have cited before in this House. I want now to read only the essential sentence in that declaration. In 1930 the question arose whether the United States Government should send arms to the Government of a country where a revolution had 'occurred and should refuse arms to the rebels, and they made this official statement:
Where we are in friendly relations through diplomatic channels with a Government which has been recognised as the legitimate Government of a country, that Government is entitled to the ordinary rights of any Government to buy arms in this country, while the people who are opposing and trying to overthrow that Government and are not yet recognised as belligerents are not entitled to that right.
They go on to say, and I ask the Government to note the phrase:
It is not a matter of choice on our part, but is a practice of mankind known as international law.
On 18th July war broke out in Spain—civil war, as we thought at first, but within a week we knew it to be complicated by a proved case of international aggression. It followed that the Spanish Government were entitled to assistance under the terms of Article 16; that they were entitled to buy arms from other Powers; and that they were entitled to demand that arms should not be supplied to the rebels. We refused those rights


to the Spanish Government. We did not do so because we had any doubts about the legitimacy or constitutional character of the Government. To-day we still recognise that Government, still deal with their Ambassador here, and still treat them, as we are bound to treat them under international law, as the Government of the country. We overrode the normal rights of Spain because we said that that was essential to do so, if European peace was to be preserved. We said that there was a greater interest which could only be served by refusing to sell arms to either side. We called that action the policy of non-intervention, and we hoped that we should by that policy shorten the war; allow the Spaniards to settle their own affairs; prevent dissensions, fears and suspicions growing up among the greater Powers of Europe; and avoid the creation of precedents in international relations that would be dangerous in future.
Who, looking back on the tragic nine months which have passed since then, would say that we had realised one of those purposes? The war has been prolonged; the Spaniards have been martyrised by a large-scale military and aerial invasion; suspicions and dissensions among the greater Powers have been enormously increased by the events that have taken place; and there have been a great number of precedents created in international practice, but, I am afraid, that all of them have been bad. In our view, these results are due to the fact that non-intervention was practised only on one side. The Fascist Powers did not come in until they thought they had supplied arms and men enough to win. They agreed to the Arms Convention on 28th August and the Convention in regard to troops on 10th February, when they thought their side was irresistible. When they found Spanish resistance stronger than they expected, they systematically violated the engagements they had made. As a result, Franco had more arms than Spaniards to use them, while the Government were sending their troops into battle armed with sticks and knives.
I have ventured to argue before in this House that this intervention by the Fascist Powers robbed the Spanish Government of victory on at least two occasions, and thus enormously prolonged the war. The first occasion was at the end of the first stage of the war when General

Franco's adherents in Spain were completely checked and the Government were recapturing city after city; then foreign aviation and the Moors which the foreign aviators brought from Africa reversed the tide and prevented the Government from winning. The second occasion was at the end of the year when the Moors had been used up. As the "Times" told us go per cent. of the original contingent that bore the brunt of the attack had been killed. Then, the Germans and Italians having brought in a great deal more artillery, munitions and troops, the Government once more had to face new offensives at Malaga and elsewhere.
These contentions were singularly supported by an article which appeared from the correspondent of the "Times" in Spain on 7th January. In that article he gave a long description of the troops whom the Germans had sent. He said that there were about 10,000, he described their uniforms, the lorries they travelled in, the howitzers they used, and said that but for their intervention the Government offensive against Vittoria would have been successful. He concluded his survey by saying:
Had Spain been left to herself the war would have been over long ago.
My contentions were far more strongly supported by a fuller and more complete article which was published in the "Times" as late as 9th March. The "Times" says that it was written by an eye-witness of events in Spain. Whoever wrote it had exceptional means of finding out the facts. It seems to me completely impartial. I say that meaning that it contains a good many things with which I do not agree. I doubt whether it is possible to have, short of Government information from military attaches on the spot, a more authoritative statement about what has happened in Spain than is contained in that article in the "Times." At the risk of wearying the House, I want to refer to one or two passages.

Mr. Crossley: From which correspondent of the "Times" did the article come? Where did he write from?

Mr. Noel-Baker: It does not say. I have the article here and will show it to the hon. Member if he likes. The writer is called a special correspondent.

Mr. Crossley: Was it from Valencia?

Mr. Noel-Baker: I have no means of knowing. I should imagine he has been on both sides, and since what he says confirms what was said before Christmas by the hon. and gallant Member for Chelmsford (Captain Macnamara) who has been there, I think I am entitled to claim that he is a high authority. He says that the International Brigade and Russian aircraft and ammunition had certainly saved Madrid at the end of October. I do not believe that anybody in the House doubts that that is true. But he goes on to say:
There can he no doubt that foreign military aid first came from Italy and Germany. The Savoia aeroplanes which crashed in French territory in July were given their flying orders on July 57, before the revolt began, and the German bombers began to arrive at the beginning of August.
He explains the importance of these aircraft. He says:
The Savoia 81's and the Junker 52's which were supplied to them (the rebels) in July and August, 40 in all of the biggest bombers in Europe, enabled General Franco first to transport his troops across the straits from Morocco, and secondly to bomb the Government fleet which blocked the straits back to their base at Cartagena,
that is to say, they prevented the Government from winning a victory which was almost within its grasp. He goes on to say that in October the Italians sent artillery and personnel, that in November they sent 40 more aeroplanes, and that they were aiding the insurgents at sea by using their fleet to watch on their behalf the movements of vessels from Russian ports. He goes on to say that betwen October and January a great many more troops from Italy and Germany were brought in. Coming to more modern times, he says that between 1st January and the middle of February, Italy poured 40,000 men into Spain fully equipped—and the Government will remember that the despatch of arms is a violation of the agreement of 28th August, whether there are men or not. These men brought rifles, ammunition, grenades, machine guns, motors and so on. The writer ends by saying that, including General O'Duffy's 3, 000 Irishmen, there are 60,000 foreigners assisting General Franco. He described two other occasions when this foreign help turned the tide in favour of General Franco at a critical moment. He estimates the volunteers on the other side at 20,000, or perhaps at an outside figure, although

he does not appear to believe it himself, of 35,000; and he says that against the 200 aircraft which Franco has from Germany and Italy, the Government have perhaps 140 or 150 foreign planes. He says that there are 80 Italian tanks with General Franco and plainly implies that the superiority in tanks and artillery is very great.
Since this article was written we have the news of the offensive in Spain by four Italian divisions on the Guadalajara front. I venture to suggest that that news revolutionises the situation with regard to this Bill. It proves that the estimates of this writer in the "Times" of the foreigners with Franco were an absolute minimum. Anyone who has read the interviews with prisoners, made by journalists with nobody else in the room, can doubt that there is a very large-scale international invasion going on. Two German officers volunteered the information that they had been told that they were coming to fight Russians and that they have not yet seen a Russian soldier. One of them gave the figure of troops as 40,000 Germans and 80,000 Italians. An Italian prisoner has told us all about the four divisions and the names of the generals. He says that they were wearing Italian Army uniforms, that their families were being paid so much a day in Italy, and that they themselves were receiving so much a day when they got to Spain. It is perfectly evident that there is this large-scale invasion by the regular armies of Italy and Germany going on.
From this long survey I draw the following conclusions: That two of the Powers which have accepted this new scheme of control have not kept their word with regard to the undertakings of 28th August and 20th February; that they only agreed to sign when they thought they had intervened enough to win, and then later broke their word; that the Spanish Government have never had anything like the amount of foreign help, either in troops or material, that the rebels have had; that but for this intervention, in the words of the writer in the "Times," the war would have been over long ago; that if every Power refused the Government of Spain all arms, as we did, that Government would have been defeated long ago and the Fascists would


have won. And then I draw this conclusion, which is vital to the arguments I am going to make about this Bill: that Germany and Italy have become belligerents in this war. It is no use disguising the truth in this House, and it is a fact that they have almost openly declared war. The Fascist Grand Council is appointed, as to every member, by Mussolini; and on 2nd March that council passed a resolution expressing "its solidarity with national Spain" and greeting the armed forces of General Franco,
whose victory must represent the end of every Bolshevist attempt in the west.
It is plain that Italy and Germany now regard themselves as belligerents in this war.
The survey which I have made leads to some other conclusions which are of no less vital importance. The first is that our Government have not used their power in the Non-Intervention Committee to expose the evasions and violations of the non-intervention agreement which have been going on. The whole purpose of the Non-Intervention Committee was to supervise the working of the agreement, as we understood it, and to examine complaints of violations when they arose. What happened when complaints were made? Nothing but counter charges, the whole thing ending in confusion, with our Government refusing to admit that it had any information of any kind. We had 56 diplomatic and consular agents in Spain and we had no information of any kind. In the second place, it shows that the Government refused to raise these matters in the Non-Intervention Committee, although they knew that the Fascists were preparing for a decisive coup. Take the recent case of the sending of Italian troops to Spain. On 17th January, the "Times" correspondent in Rome reported that there was a feeling there that Italy was ready for a volunteer agreement, so called, but that at the same time Germany and Italy were hurrying out men and supplies to General Franco. On 11th February the diplomatic correspondent of the "Times," who usually knows about as much as the Government, and certainly does not know things which they do not know, commenting on the proceedings of the Non-Intervention Committee, said:
The day's proceedings only deepened the impression that some of the principal Powers

are deliberately playing out time in the hope that the issue of the war will meanwhile be decided in their favour by force of arms.
On the very day when he reported the making of the volunteer agreement, that is, on 17th February, the diplomatic correspondent of the "Times" said it was widely assumed that the foreign Governments which support General Franco thought they had enough men there to win and he added:
The inflow, especially of Italians, has been extremely rapid in the last eight weeks, and it is not impossible that their total number has risen within that period from a figure below 10,000 to one within measurable distance of 50,000.
The Government did not tell us anything of that. On the contrary, they told us, as the Noble Lord said on 8th February, that all Italian troops in Spain ranked as volunteers. He said later that so far as they knew the numbers on the two sides were about equal. If that was the information they were receiving, they were even more singularly ill-informed this year than they were last autumn.
I ask the House to forgive me for having strayed, as they may think, so far, but it is with that background, and with our minds full of these facts, that we approach this new scheme of control. We consider that there are certain conditions which are really vital if that scheme is to be justifiable at all. The first is that it must work fairly on both sides. Germany and Italy have been given the job of looking after the coasts of the Government of Spain and we may be sure that there will be very rigorous application of control there. Since the loyal Governments are those which are likely to send munitions to the Government of Spain, it is likely that this scheme may dry up all the outside sources of munitions which the Government of Spain now has. If that should be so, then a small quantity of munitions going to the other side, a small evasion of the control, will become of immense importance. Therefore, it is very important that there should not be even small-scale evasions on the other side.
When we come to look at the control proposed, we are afraid that it may be all too easily used by Governments, which have proved themselves time and again to be Governments of bad faith, to abuse the gaps in the system which will exist. For example, no Air control


is provided for. Aircraft can fly from Italy and Germany and without coming to earth can reach General Franco's lines. We know that because one aeroplane crashed in France with all its documents on board. No one likely to send aircraft can fly to the territory held by the Government of Spain. Yet the provision of more aircraft may be a decisive factor, as the foreign aircraft were decisive in the march up the Tagus Valley in October. Take the Canaries. The danger which we have in our minds about the Canaries, in their exclusion for a month or more from the operation of the scheme, is that ships going from European countries will build up stocks and reserves of men in the Canaries for General Franco, which he can subsequently bring to his territory in ships under his flag.
As I understand the difficulties of the position they are principally a matter of expense—according to the explanations given in another place—but we should not allow such a gap if this war were our own, and I want to ask the Government whether they will not seriously consider sending a couple of warships down there, with a corps of half-a-dozen observers. Then, when a ship came from Europe towards the Canaries, we could put on board an observer, at the ten-mile limit—the limit of observation. He would accompany the ship into port and see that no arms or troops were unloaded, and would then come out again with the ship and rejoin the warship. There would be no great expense about that, and no difficulties, and that arrangement could be made to operate to-morrow if there were agreement. In the third place I come to a more general criticism of the efficacy of this scheme. The Minister explained with great lucidity how it is to work. Every ship is to carry an observing officer with power to demand the unpacking of goods, to look at the passports of the passengers, to supervise the disembarkation and to find out any facts he wants to know. If he finds that there are arms or troops on board he reports to his higher authority and ultimately to the Non-Intervention Committee in London. Also, under this scheme the captain of the ship has duties. Under the national laws which will be passed, he may not land troops or goods, and if he does he is to be subject to a penalty. My hon. Friend the Member

for Ebbw Vale (Mr. A. Bevan) pointed out the serious danger that Governments which are of bad faith will impose illusory penalties. The captain may refuse to listen to the observer and may unload his forbidden cargo. The matter will come before a German or an Italian court and a formal sentence may be passed; it will all be done in camera, and no one will know what happens, or if anything happens at all. Probably in fact the captain will get a big reward. Against that kind of abuse there is only one protection under this scheme, and that is the report of the observing officer. I ask the Government whether they will not make another change in this scheme and agree that the reports of the observing officers on board vessels shall automatically and at once be made public. As I understand it, they are to be handled by diplomatic procedure, and ultimately discussed in the Non-Intervention Committee. If that is so, and if there is no publicity, we are afraid that there will be the same farce as there was over complaints of violation last autumn. We beg that, as a real measure to make this scheme work, we shall have automatic and immediate publicity given to the reports from the observers.
And may I make one further suggestion in this connection? It is assumed that there is no penalty which you can make for violation of this kind. With respect, that is not true. There is one very important penalty. Suppose a captain insists on unloading a given amount of ammunition or a given number of troops in one of General Franco's ports. In that case you can agree that the same quantity of arms or the same number of volunteers shall be allowed to go to the Spanish Government; or, if you want to make it a preventive measure, you can allow double the number to go to the Spanish Government. Let the Minister not think that this is a frivolous suggestion. If we know that under this scheme one side is getting arms as a result of international bad faith, then it is only right that the other side should get them too.
I pass to our next objection. It is hardly an objection; it is really an observation concerning our share of the control on the Portuguese frontier. In the White Paper the Government gave an assurance to the Committee that they were fully


satisfied that the Portuguese Government would allow—

Dr. Burgin: I am sure the hon. Gentleman will understand that I do not wish to prevent him making, within the limits of order, a general survey, but I am sure that he would not suggest to the House that any part of the land control of the Portuguese Government comes within this Measure.

Mr. Noel-Baker: I am much obliged to the hon. Gentleman. It is quite true and I will leave the Portuguese point alone. [Interruption.] The Leader of the Opposition reminds me that the Measure is futile unless the land control is effective. I can make my point in one sentence and I think the hon. Gentleman will not mind if I do. I only want to remind the Government that mule trains in mountainous country can carry a lot of ammunition, and I hope that the Government will make certain that there are enough observers on the spot to see that that is not done.
I pass to the next grave danger that we see. It is a danger concerning the control of General Franco's coasts. Under this scheme, as the Minister has explained, the control applies only to ships of States which accept the plan. That is inevitable under the scheme. But it does leave dangerous gaps. Japan has a large merchant fleet. Japan signed a Treaty with Germany not so long ago pledging those countries to an ideological conflict with Communism. Suppose that Japan sends a lot of ships to help General Franco; what are you going to do? How are you going to right that injustice? Suppose an even graver case. Suppose people transfer their ships to General Franco's flag. Suppose that German and Italian ships are transferred to that flag. To prevent that, some amendment of this scheme is necessary, and should be relatively simple. It ought to be possible to forbid the transfer of ships to General Franco's flag, and to take the International Register of Shipping, as it was on 8th March, as decisive, and to say that no change in that position will be allowed. If you wanted to add a penalty, you could provide that if any ship is found to have changed its flag since 8th March, and is under General Franco's flag, it shall be seized and sold as prize and the proceeds used for paying the costs of control. If this were a serious

scheme, some amendment like that would be made. I am sure that the Government will agree that something should be done to meet the grave danger of transfer of flag after 8th March.
Another danger of the abuse of this control relates to the Spanish Government's coast. The hon. Member for Ebbw Vale drew attention to the fact that patrol of the Government coasts is allocated to Italy and Germany. But they are belligerents. The Government of Spain have for months been pointing out that those countries' fleets have been bombarding Spanish towns, that they have shielded the rebel fleet when Government ships were in position to attack them, and that they have signalled to the rebel fleet to come up and capture merchantmen. According to those claims, the German and Italian fleets have virtually instituted a blockade which the rebel fleet could not have instituted by itself. These allegations are supported in a considerable measure by the reports that have appeared in the "Times." I could give details if I had the time, but I do not want to weary the House. At any rate, is it not a matter of common sense that, if you have, as Germany and Italy have, engaged your Army and your Air Force in warfare in a foreign country, you will certainly engage your fleet? We ask: Why did the Government agree to this system which may enable the German and Italian Fleets to blockade completely the Government coasts, so far as the Spanish Government's own ships are concerned, and which may allow those fleets much greater opportunities for offensive operations? I am asking questions which I hope will be answered. Why did His Majesty's Government not agree to the proposals put forward by France and Russia for mixed patrols? We were told that there were technical difficulties, but the noble Lord will remember the saying at the Disarmament Conference that a technical difficulty is usually a political objection in uniform. If the Admiralty of France were prepared to accept a mixed patrol of ships of different Fleets, we might have done so too. It is too late now, but I hope that the Government will at least introduce another amendment of this scheme and insist that neutral naval officers shall be put as observers upon the ships which are doing the blockading. Why should any nation that is of good faith in this matter not


agree that every naval ship that she has there should have a Swedish or Dutch naval officer on board to see that she is not doing anything that she should not do? I hope that the Government will press that suggestion very strongly.
The last point I want to make is in regard to a condition without the fulfilment of which we should consider this scheme dangerous in the extreme. That condition is that steps should be taken immediately to secure the removal of foreign troops from Spain. It is not only unreasonable, but it is immoral in the highest degree, to deprive the Spanish Government of arms and to make the arms blockade completely effective against her, at a time when a large-scale international invasion is going on. That would be the kind of non-intervention which would set the final seal of sacred propriety upon intervention of the most dangerous kind. I have already quoted the Noble Lord as saying that all foreign troops in Spain "rank as volunteers." I would recall a recent case in which a public servant was awarded £7,000 damages because somebody slandered him by saying that he believed in a talking mongoose. During this last winter His Majesty's Government have accomplished a far more difficult intellectual feat than believing in a talking mongoose; they have believed not only in totalitarian volunteers, but that Signor Mussolini intends to keep his word. It is true that some people have reported that there is a pretence of recruiting these volunteers at Fascist headquarters in Italy. But the prisoners say that they were mobilised. No one doubts that they were clothed, housed, fed, armed, transported, shipped and paid by the Governments of Italy and Germany. They are not volunteers. You cannot put on the same footing as those troops the other volunteers, the 20,000 or so of the international column on the Government side who are engaged in what Lord Palmerston encouraged 10,000 Britishers to do for the Government of Spain in 1837. They are doing only what was done by people like Lafayette, Byron and Garibaldi, whose names Englishmen, not less than others, now honour. You cannot put these men on the same footing as the hired levies from Italy and Germany.
But, if it can be done, we want all foreigners to leave Spain. Indeed, we

say that the first and most urgent duty of the Government, before they do anything else with regard to this control, a duty which must be fulfilled before we can vote for the Bill—and that is why we are going to vote against it to-night—is that they shall demand that all the foreigners be withdrawn. Do the Government really think that this control is safe or right until that removal of foreigners has been carried out? Do they deny that the German and Italian armies are in Spain? Do they deny that that is a violation of the agreement of 28th August, and of the principles which they laid down in the Council of the League Resolution last December? Do they deny that it is a violation of the Covenant of the League? Then let them act. Let them no longer pretend not to know the facts. Let them consider where pretending not to know the facts may lead their. Here is one example. On 22nd December, the prohibition of volunteers was raised in the Non-Intervention Committee; on that day 6,500 Italians left for Spain. On 2nd January, the Gentleman's Agreement was concluded; 4,000 more Italians landed in Spain. On 7th January, an Italian Note agreed in principle to the prohibition of volunteers. Ten days later, 10,000 more Italians landed in Spain. On 25th January there was a further Italian Note agreeing to a joint prohibition of volunteers. Two days later a further great number of Italians arrived. On 20th February the agreement was supposed to come into force; I understand that the Foreign Secretary now admits that 10 or 12 days later more Italians arrived in Spain.
We beg the Government not to pretend any longer to be blind. We beg them to consider that we are in a grave international crisis. They should summon the Non-Intervention Committee to-morrow, demand the evacuation of foreign troops, and allow no sabotage in the discussion about the gold assets of the legitimate Government of Spain. If they cannot get an agreement to that end—of course I know they would like it—and a system of supervision which will give guarantees that the evacuation will be applied in fairness to all, they should, within a few days, at the beginning of next week, summon the Council of the League of Nations and send a League of Nations Commission of Inquiry to Spain. If General Franco refuses to receive it, he will stand


self-condemned. If he refuses to receive the commission, or if the commission reports that foreign troops are there, then the Government should let the Spanish Government buy arms. Unless they can get rid of the foreign invaders of Spain, the Government must restore the rights of the Government of Spain. I have a profound conviction that that is all that is needed to bring this aggression to an end. The Government of Madrid still have, as they always had, hundreds of thousands of men whom they cannot put into the field because they cannot arm them.
I know that the Government are going to say that selling arms to Spain would be intervention and that intervention is war. But the German and Italian Governments have sold arms in Spain, and the Russians have sold arms on the other side, and there has not been war. Is it seriously suggested that if, as a reply to the German and Italian aggression, we sold arms to Spain, Hitler would declare war upon us? I am certain that that is a fantastic suggestion. Indeed, the best hope of averting war lies in stopping this continual encroachment of aggression spreading gradually from continent to continent—Asia in 1931, America in 1932, Africa in 1935 and Europe in 1936. And now Hitler is preparing to spring another mine in Austria; the danger signs are there. Czechoslovakia is on the list. Let the Government make a stand while they have a chance of stopping one of these aggressions without war and by peaceful means. We ask them to rouse themselves to action. If they do not, they may be roused all too soon by the tocsin of war.

6.34 p.m.

Mr. Petherick: The final point of the hon. Member was an appeal to the Government to do everything they could to stop war before it was too late, but that is precisely what the Government are endeavouring to do by introducing this Measure. In the opening of his remarks, the hon. Gentleman said that he was in favour of intervention, and I understand that that view is shared by hon. Members who sit on those benches. His objections, apparently, are that the Non-Intervention Agreement is not likely to be carried out. It will be very interesting to know exactly where hon. Members opposite stand. While endeavouring to

persuade the House that he wanted nonintervention and that he was in fact impartial, the hon. Member showed in almost every word of his speech that his main and almost his only desire, is that the Government forces in Spain should win.

Mr. Noel-Baker: I do not pretend to be impartial; I want the Government of Spain to win. All that I ask for to-night is something to which, I hope, every hon. Member in every quarter of the House will agree—a system which works fairly all round and is real non-intervention because it does not help anyone at all.

Mr. Petherick: We now know that the only thing that hon. Members opposite wish for is that the Government forces in Spain should win. Surely, true nonintervention would be to leave the Spaniards to fight it out, but the hon. Member adds a plea that this country should take sides in order that the Spanish Government may be successful in the war. It has often been maintained in the past, and even at the present time, that the Spanish Government is not only the de facto Government, but is also the legal Government in Spain; but there is a certain amount of doubt as to whether it is the legal Government. I am not going to argue whether it is or whether it is not; all I would say on that point is that this movement in Spain against the Government has now ceased to be an ordinary rebellion, and has become a civil war, and you never have a civil war in any country—and so far as I know there has been no such civil war in history—unless there is a large proportion of people on both sides who firmly believe that they are right and that they are fighting for the safety and future of their country. Therefore, it seems to me that, whether General Franco and his supporters are in the right or whether the Government are in the right, both sides, strong, powerful and determined, think that they are in the right. I do not believe it is for this country to take sides at all. I maintain that our object is to do everything we can, in conjunction with other countries, to localise the war and prevent it from spreading, perhaps all over Europe.
I see that there is an Amendment on the Paper, that the Bill be read a Second time upon this day six months, which has been put down by hon. Members who represent Clydeside divisions. Do they


by that Amendment suggest that we should actually interfere in the civil war? If so, they could not possibly object to German or Italian interference in our internal affairs here in this country. Moreover, do they think that, if we did interfere, we should carry the country with us; or are they so indifferent to democratic opinion that they would not mind whether we carried the country with us or not? I am convinced that, even though the people of this country may be divided as to which of the two sides they want to win, they are absolutely determined not to get involved in internal troubles in other countries, wherever they may be. I would like to ask both sections of the Opposition this question: Do they ignore completely, in the attitude they take up, the danger of a war spreading to other countries, including our own, and setting the whole of Europe in a blaze? They would say, perhaps, regardless of risk, let us help the proper Government in Spain; let us sell them arms because they are the proper Government. Is that really because it is the proper Government, or is it because that Government represents Left-Wing opinion? It would be interesting to hear the reply to that question. If it is not because the Spanish Government is a Left-Wing Government, it would be interesting to see the reactions of hon. Members supposing, for instance, that the position in Germany should become confused, and that a civil war should break out against the Hitler regime. Should we then be told that we should be acting constitutionally and properly by helping the Hitler regime against the rebels who were trying to overthrow it? If hon. Members opposite really hold that belief, we might possibly see, at some time in the future, the hon. Member for Gorbals (Mr. Buchanan) and his friends fighting shoulder to shoulder with Herr Hitler in defence of the sanctity of established institutions. The hon. Member for Derby (Mr. Noel-Baker), who, I notice, is not here at the moment, said that the Spanish Government have been martyrised by non-intervention. He told us a great deal about the intervention of Italy in Spain, but we did not hear a word from him, except by implication and in passing, about the intervention on behalf of the Spanish Government of the Russians, and, indeed, of the French. I do not

wish to over-state the case, but it is extremely difficult to establish which countries—

Mr. David Grenfell: In the temporary absence of my hon. Friend the Member for Derby, may I point out that he did mention that there might be from 20,000 to 30,000 foreign troops on the Government side?

Mr. Petherick: He did say that, but only in passing. The whole gravamen of his charge throughout his speech was against Italy and Germany. He said that of course it was plain that a number of foreigners—I think he said 20,000 or 25,000—were fighting for the Government, but it was as a minor issue; his chief claim was that the real culprits were Germany and Italy. I do not believe that they are the real culprits, but, if they are, I am not sufficiently interested to lay the charge against them only, because it is beyond doubt that the principle of non-intervention has been infringed by many countries in Europe, including Ireland and ourselves to a modest extent. Is it not, therefore, all the more to the credit of Lord Plymouth and his committee that they have been able to induce those countries which felt very strongly that they wished General Franco and his insurgents to win to agree to this non-intervention pact? I hope that in this matter His Majesty's Government will be able to count on at least lukewarm support from the Liberal benches, because it is undoubtedly the case that, the stronger the consensus of opinion in this country is in favour of localising the war, the more chance there will be of that localisation being successful.
I should like to ask the Parliamentary Secretary to the Board of Trade a few questions on the Bill itself and the White Paper which accompanies it. Can he tell the House how far other countries that are participants in the non-intervention agreement have gone in putting legislation through their Chambers, where, indeed, Chambers exist; and how soon it will be before everything is completed and we are able to go ahead and try to make non-intervention effective? Furthermore, I see that the penalties against our own subjects who infringe the provisions of the Act are about £100. It would be interesting to know what penalties foreign countries intend to impose on their nationals. To take another


point, I understand that the Non-Intervention Committee deals with broad questions of policy, and that the Non-Intervention Board will deal with details, but I am not quite clear as to what matters the Council, which apparently will be under the Board, will deal with.
This Bill, as the Parliamentary Secretary has said, applies only to British ships. The Bill and the White Paper have not been in our hands for very long, and therefore I may be a little confused on this particular point. Are we to understand, for instance, that our Navy can only board British ships in the zones allotted, or are they permitted to board the ships of foreign countries? Again, what steps have been taken so far with regard to the appointments of observers and administrators? It is not necessary, apparently, to have a Financial Resolution accompanying the Bill, but it seems to me that the expenditure of a considerable amount of money by this country will be involved, either directly or indirectly, in carrying through this policy.
There are one or two other quite minor matters in connection with the Clauses of the Bill on which I should like to have some information. Sub-section (4) of Clause I says that, if any ship contravenes the provisions of the Section, the master of the ship will be guilty of a misdemeanour and subject to certain penalties. Ought there not to be some proviso to deal with the case of a master who is able to prove that he has received orders from his owner or his charterer? Sub-section (5) gives the Board of Trade power to exempt ships regularly engaged in carrying goods or passengers to or from Spanish territory. From this it appears that, if certain conditions are fulfilled, a ship does not have to go to a prescribed place. Is this Sub-section entirely necessary? Would it not be possible to include, say, Tangier as one of the prescribed places? Sub-section (6) states what an observer can do. There are many things that he cannot do. He certainly cannot prevent a cargo from being discharged or passengers from landing. In the Act that we passed last year powers were given to officers of His Majesty's Navy to take in tow an offending ship which was carrying munitions to Spain, and bring her into

port, and then proceedings could be taken against the master in the Courts.
There are one or two other points, purely of a Committee nature, with which I do not desire to bother the House now, but I would like to say that I feel most strongly that, although it is quite possible that other countries may not fulfil this Non-Intervention Agreement to the fullest extent, the measures which His Majesty's Government are taking are entirely right in the circumstances. The object of localising the war in Spain is a very high object, and I only wish that we could carry it to a further conclusion in our general international relations. Hon. Members on this side of the House have only one motive in this matter. We may have private hopes one way or the other, but we are not pro-Franco or pro-Government. The only thing we wish to see is that Great Britain does not get involved in war, that Europe is not thrown into a terrible bonfire, and that the war in Spain is allowed to carry on its natural course and to be brought to a conclusion by the Spaniards themselves at the earliest possible moment. If I may just say this in conclusion. It is a quotation from Octavia, the wife of Mark Antony and the sister of Octavius, who said when those two soldiers and administrators were threatening to make war on each other:
No one knows which of you would win. And in either event my lot would be miserable indeed.

7.1 p.m.

Mr. W. Roberts: The legitimacy of a government is not reckoned by whether it is a government in being, but by whether it rests on the wish of the people and has been legally constituted as a democratic government. The Spanish Government was so constituted, in spite of statements to the contrary. I have not the figures here, but those parties in Spain which are supporting the Spanish Government to-day commanded a large majority at the General Election. Even if that Government had a majority in the Cortes but had a minority of votes in the country, it would still be the legitimate Government. The Conservative party in 1924 polled about 37 per cent. of the votes in the country, but I did not notice that any members of the Army or Navy thought fit on that account to rebel against that Government. I believe it


was Metternich who said that non-intervention was a metaphysical dream, and when asked to describe what he meant, he said it meant the same as intervention. Apparently that definition is as correct to-day as it was in his time.
An agreement was reached six months ago by which 27 Powers agreed not to send arms to Spain. We are asked to-day to pass a Bill, not to make that nonintervention effective, but to enable the Foreign Office to get the information in which it has been so lacking recently, to establish a system of observation. That is all this Bill does. It does not give the officers appointed under it power to stop arms going into Spain; it does not give warships operating under it power to stop ships and turn them back if they are found to contain arms. It only gives them power to observe. During the six months of negotiation non-intervention has been flagrantly violated, chiefly by Germany and Italy, and not by Russia—that is agreed by the right hon. Gentleman's own newspapers, such as the "Times" and the "Daily Telegraph," which are not normally expected to have a Red bias. This Bill might be more acceptable to some of us if previously an agreement had been reached to withdraw the volunteers at present in Spain. In all these negotiations the Spanish Government have taken up a perfectly correct attitude on every occasion. They have always been ready to fall in with the ideas put to them by the Non-Intervention Committee, or by any other association of great Powers. They have on this occasion already agreed to the withdrawal of volunteers fighting on their side. It is General Franco who has blocked the possibility of limiting this war to a Spanish Civil War. That has been the case on almost every occasion. The delaying tactics of Germany, Italy and General Franco have prevented this war being limited to a civil war in Spain.
I would like to reinforce the plea so ably expressed by the hon. Member for Derby (Mr. Noel-Baker) that a commission should be established by the League of Nations to inquire what volunteers there are and to arrange for their simultaneous withdrawal. We have heard criticisms of the League of Nations because of the ineffective and slow procedure adopted with regard to the Abyssinian question, but if the working

of the Non-Intervention Agreement is an example of what we may expect from the return to the more old-fashioned, direct diplomacy, all I can say is that the League of Nations is efficiency and speed itself. I wish to emphasise a point which has previously been made, that the sending of large number of regulars by Italy and Germany, which is also an established fact, is an act of aggression just as bad as that of Italy against Abyssinia, or Japan against China. I would like to know whether the Government are proposing to raise this question at Geneva, and, if not, why not? When there is this evidence of interference by the navies of Germany and Italy, of the participation by their Air Forces and regular troops, we deserve a full explanation of what the Government's policy is, and whether this question is to be raised through the League of Nations.
We might be more able to welcome this Bill if it were not the fact that it is probably going to give an additional advantage to General Franco. Many of us on this side are only anxious to see non-intervention made effective, but that will not be done merely by Great Britain setting a good example. We want to be assured that the effect of this scheme will not be to hand over the Mediterranean coast of the Spanish Government to Germany and Italy and so enable their naval forces to exercise observation on possible munitions and volunteers going into Spanish Government territory, to enable them to carry out a blockade of food supplies in collusion with the rebel navy and armed merchantmen, and so present General Franco with a handsome present. Why was not the much more effective and fairer system of observation at the ports not accepted? The Parliamentary Secretary to the Board of Trade did not give us any of the history of the negotiations leading up to the Bill. I believe it is correct to say that it was not the objections of the Spanish Government which prevented that fairer system being adopted, but the objections of General Franco, Germany, Italy and Portugal. There has been no willingness on the part of the Fascist Powers to afford any equality to those fighting in this war. If the system of control at the ports had been adopted, this tremendous loophole in the scheme would not have arisen of


General Franco's ships being able to import arms under the eyes of the British and French Navies.
Is there any provision in the Bill to prevent Italy or Japan, the United States or the South American Republic, or any other country, whether a member of tile Non-Intervention Committee or not, selling a ship to General Franco or to the Spanish Government, making a paper transaction? I am not clear whether such a ship could be stopped, whether a ship having the right to fly the flag of any of the countries parties to the Non-Intervention Agreement can pass the British and French Navies without control, or whether there is an obligation on the British and French Navies even to report the existence of such a ship. I find nothing in the scheme which obliges the navies to report such an occurrence if the ship has the right to fly such a flag. In almost every case where the word "ship" is employed, it is modified by the phrase "having the right to fly," but in the Clause which deals with the Government's exercising naval observation, I see that the word "ship" is not so qualified. Does that mean that the Navies will have the right to stop every ship to find out what she is? That cuts both ways because, while we and the French will carry out our obligations scrupulously, we have, from past experience, no confidence whatever that Germany will not make use of the right to create a blockade of foodstuffs and other raw materials which the Spanish Government has a right to receive and which General Franco will receive, because we shall be carrying out our duties scrupulously, and not exceeding them.
Those are two very large loop-holes in the scheme, and there are others which have been mentioned, but on this whole question I ask the Government to consider very seriously whether they are not allowing all kinds of rights which British Governments for centuries have struggled for—rights of neutrality on the sea—to slip through their fingers. General Franco, for instance, is laying mines somewhat wholesale outside the 10-mile limit. Our information is that the whole of the channel between Majorca and the Spanish coast is mined right across—and that is far more than To miles—and British and French ships have been advised to make a wide detour. Are the British Govern-

ment allowing action to be taken which will in the future create precedents which may be very serious indeed?
Questions of that sort affect the Dominions as well as ourselves, and I should like to think that the Dominions have been consulted on this matter. The trade route from the Mediterranean down the West Coast of Africa is important to them as well as to us. Even during the War I believe we did not lay mines outside our territorial waters except in retaliation for some action taken by our enemies. [Interruption.] The reason was always given that it was in retaliation for mines which Germany had laid. On this occasion the rebels have been allowed, without any protest being made, to lay mines both in the Bay of Biscay and in the Mediterranean which have caused serious loss to British shipping.

Vice-Admiral Taylor: Our mine laying during the War had nothing whatever to do with retaliation.

Mr. Roberts: I am talking about the legal position. I ask whether in view of conventions, which no doubt will not be very carefully observed on either side, which were agreed to before the War, the British Government and the parties to the agreement will not take it upon themselves to sweep up these mines. What objection is there to doing that? They are German mines of the latest type and Germany, in supplying them, has broken the Non-intervention Agreement. She had no right to supply them and, according to international law, the rebels have no right whatever to lay them, and they ought to be swept up. I would ask, also, that there should be a little more consultation with the British Dominions over this question. I am not satisfied that this scheme will in effect be a step forward in establishing non-intervention. I am a little inclined to fear that the only reason why, after such long delay, Germany, Italy and Portugal have agreed to it is that, knowing that they have such large supplies of munitions, aeroplanes and regular forces in Spain, such observation as is established by the Bill will be quite valueless, though they may think it will be of some value in that they have now overwhelming forces there, enough to win the war, and that the control will be effective in preventing any other country equalising the balance by


supplying the Spanish Government with what the rebels have obtained illegally, contrary to the undertakings of the Powers who supplied them.

7.21 p.m.

Mr. Crossley: The hon. Member's speech, like that of the hon. Member for Derby (Mr. Noel-Baker), who made an eloquent and notable speech earlier on, has covered a very wide range. I do not wish on this occasion to make what by inclusion and insinuation I was charged with last time I spoke on this subject, a biased speech. I certainly shall not attempt to enter into the controversy as to whether or not the Government of Spain is a legally constituted Government. But I should like to deal with some of the points that the hon. Member for West Cumberland (Mr. W. Roberts) has raised concerning the Bill. I do not think he has done justice to the patience and perseverance of Lord Plymouth's Committee. Heaven knows, international agreements are not easy to come by at present, but they worked for months and months, and this is the result, and I do not think it serves any useful purpose to say, before it has been tried out in practice, that it is bound to fail because the observers have power only to observe. They also have power, of course, to report to the Non-Intervention Committee, and, if the countries which have put their signatures to the Non-Intervention Agreement are sincere in their desire for non-intervention, you must give them a chance at the beginning. The only country which declined to take up its sphere of action under the agreement was not Germany, not Italy, not France nor England, but Russia. [HON. MEMBERS: "Why?"] Because they did not like sailing in the rough waters of the Bay of Biscay.

Mr. Bevan: Their sphere of operation was too far removed from their base.

Mr. Crossley: The German sphere in the Mediterranean is the furthest part of Spain from the German coast.

Mr. Bevan: We should all be delighted if Germany also refused to take part.

Mr. Crossley: Possibly. This is an agreement which involves a number of countries which hold entirely different opinions. In Italy there is a most

sincere desire for victory for one side; in Germany there is probably sincere desire for victory for one side, and in France and Russia for victory for the other side. I believe our people are only too desirous of not being dragged in at all on either side. Most people in this country have private sympathies with one side or the other, but the considered and firm opinion of the vast majority is that they do not want to be brought in to help either side in the dispute.
The hon. Member went on to the League of Nations. I cannot conceive a more dangerous arena into which the League of Nations might be drawn. It is having a hard enough time at present. Many of us on this side, as well as hon. Members opposite, are hoping that it may be rebuilt, but it cannot be rebuilt by plunging it into a conflict in which the sympathies of half the world are on one side and of half the world on the other, and which is not a rebellion at all but a civil war on the same sort of scale that we had in the time of Cromwell, when probably most Members of this House would have been Roundheads and opposed to what might have been held to be the constitutional Government of the time. I hope that, whatever happens, our Government will at no time encourage any appeal to the League of Nations.

Miss Rathbone: Does not the hon. Member admit that, assuming the truth of the charge of large-scale intervention by Italian troops, it constitutes a flagrant violation of the obligations under Article 10 of the Covenant and, if that is the case, is it not proper that the League of Nations should be asked to express its opinion on the subject? What is the use of the League if it is not allowed to discuss any subject on which there is a strong controversy?

Mr. Crossley: Perhaps the hon. Lady is right, but I should not care to assume that those charges by the Spanish Government are correct. I believe that intervention on both sides has been pretty general and equal from the outbreak of the war. This is a sincere effort to stop it and I should not like to prejudice it by fresh appeals to the League of Nations at present. The hon. Member for West Cumberland asked why there could not be observation at the ports. I agree that that would be a very much more satisfactory arrangement than observation on


the sea, because observation on the sea is very difficult. It is a very big sea and ships may get past. But consider the difficulties of observation at the ports. Consider the difficulties of German and Italian observers trying to do their duty in the harbours of Valencia and Barcelona, and consider the difficulties of French and Russian observers trying to do their duty at Vigo and Cadiz. I think their position would be most unpleasant. When a religious deputation went from this country to Spain recently they were met on the gangway of their ship and asked, for the safety of their conductor, if they would not immediately retire to their cabins and change their collars before they went ashore.

Mr. W. Roberts: Is the hon. Member also aware that General Franco would not give them permission to go into his territory?

Mr. Crossley: I believe that it is true that General Franco denies many people permission to enter his country, and equally it is true that his principal source of military information is the foreign Press correspondence from Madrid. For that reason he is extremely desirous not to have too many people in his country, particularly people well known to be violently prejudiced in their views. The suggestion which came from the hon. Member for Derby was for mixed patrols on the sea. Mixed patrols can be of two kinds. They can be a patrol of observers of different nationalities on a ship of a particular nationality, or they can be ships of different nationalities forming particular squadrons. If you adopt the latter course, a ship manned by a captain and crew sympathetic with the ship bringing arms would probably let that ship through. It would be a much less effective method of control than the method of control in the Bill. I do not think the method in the Bill is idealistic. I doubt whether an idealistic method of control could be devised, but it is about as clever and as likely to meet the difficulties as any scheme which could, in fact, be devised.
The last matter the hon. Member raised was that he desired the British Navy to conduct general mine-sweeping duties. I cannot help thinking that that would be rather a superfluous addition to their duties, which they are carrying out in a magnificent way by impartially rescuing

the people of both sides in Spain. The hon. Member for Derby was excessively nervous that on the Eastern side of Spain the Germans and Italians would administer a blockade. I would remind him that the Germans and Italians on the eastern side of Spain will have precisely the same powers as we shall have in certain other areas and as the French will have in other areas, namely, to send an observer on these ships to report to the Non-Intervention Committee. That is all their powers can be. I do not believe that there has at any time been bombardment by Germans and Italians. That is a dangerous accusation, particularly in view of the fact that the Spaniards are not very knowledgeable about their own Navy, when on one occasion they bombed the "Royal Oak" in mistake for the "Canarias," despite the fact that the "Royal Oak" is three times as large as the "Canarias." I think they have from time to time mistaken their ships, and said they were ships of another nationality. Nevertheless, I feel that that is an accusation which should not be made.

Mr. W. Roberts: Does the hon. Gentleman suggest that they also mistook Valencia?

Mr. Crossley: I did not know that they mistook Valencia for a foreign ship.

Mr. Roberts: The Spanish Government only shelled a wrong ship. I wonder whether the other side shell wrong cities by mistake?

Mr. Crossley: I do not think so. I should think that they intended to shell Valencia, and that it was a Spanish ship that did so. I have seen no real evidence to prove that it was anything else, or, that any German or Italian submarines have in fact conducted any military operations on the East Coast of Spain. If the hon. Member is able to direct my attention to any reliable evidence on that point, I shall be glad if he will do so. I have seen opinions expressed by Spaniards and by Spanish Press representatives, and I was casting doubt upon the authenticity of the evidence by relating the incident of the "Royal Oak," and the "Canarias," and that was my point. I would make this appeal, that we should at least assume the integrity of the countries participating in the Non-Intervention Agreement. I believe that the intervention on


both sides up to the present time has been about equal. I would gladly develop that matter but I think that perhaps I had better not do so. I hope that the House will prove a little more grateful than it has in the last hour for the extremely hard work of Lord Plymouth's Committee.

7.36 p.m.

Mr. Stephen: I beg to move, to leave out the word "now," and, at the end of the Question, to add the words "upon this day six months."
I appreciated very much the clarity with which the Parliamentary Secretary introduced this Bill to the House. I do not think that we can complain of the way in which he did the job allotted to him. I would certainly congratulate him upon his clarity, and I only wish that the Government of which he is a member had showed similar clarity with regard to the policy they have pursued. I also wish to congratulate the hon. Member for Derby (Mr. Noel-Baker) upon the speech that he made here to-day. It was one of the most memorable speeches I have heard in this House. It was a scathing indictment of the policy of the Government, and it has put on record the organised hypocrisy of the policy of the National Government with regard to Spain. He left very little more for anyone else to say from this side of the House with regard to the position, and I do not intend to repeat the facts or the arguments which he introduced in connection with this matter.
Evidently the Government have been very successful not in their policy of nonintervention, but in the policy of intervention, because all the way through the Government have acted in such a manner as to give every support to the insurgents in Spain, and also to deny to the legally constituted Government in Spain that which that Government were entitled to expect from the British Government. The overwhelming majority of the working classes in this country believe that the British Government have acted very badly in connection with the Spanish Government. I am confident that the overwhelming opinion of the working-class people is that the Spanish Government and the Spanish workers have not had a square deal from the British Government. In the past, the British

Government have never acted as they have acted in connection with this matter in refusing to allow munitions to go to the legally constituted Government in another country. It was a quite unprecedented action, and one which I believe was dictated by the class sympathy of the Government rather than by their class interest.
This is an agreement which has as its objective the ending of the civil war in Spain, simply by cutting the throat of the Spanish Republic, because it really appears to be handing over to Germany and Italy the opportunity of making it almost impossible for the Spanish Government to carry on their struggle against the rebels in that country. Complaint has been made by the Spanish Government to the League of Nations and they have been told of the divisions of the Italian army fighting in Spain on the side of Franco, and now this House is being asked to hand over to the Italian Government the full opportunity of blockading the Spanish coast, so that the Italians will be at liberty to give full support to the divisions which they have operating on the side of the rebels in Spain. Is there any Member of the House who believes, now that this agreement is made, that, if the forces on the side of the Spanish Government obtain the victory over those Italian troops, the Italian warships will not see to it that succour goes to the Italian forces operating in Spain on behalf of the rebels? Are they going to leave their fellow-countrymen to whatever may happen to them if the Spanish Government forces are able to get the upper hand? If there are 100,000 Italian soldiers in Spain, fully equipped—

Mr. Crossley: That is wrong.

Mr. Stephen: The hon. Member for Stretford (Mr. Crossley) assures me that they are not there, but I listened to his speech and I obtained nothing from it in the way of material to provide me with any brief in regard to his statement.

Mr. Crossley: I could have given the hon. Member any amount of material, but I Was trying to talk about this Bill. My view is that there are probably about 20,000 Italians in Spain.

Mr. Stephen: I am sorry, if the hon. Member could have given me all that information, that he did not give me some


information instead of simply twiddling his thumbs and making casual remarks in the way that he did when he was addressing the House. An hon. Member opposite interrupts me. I did not interrupt him when he was making a statement to the House, and was referring to the Amendment which we have put on the Paper. I can tell him, if he is sufficiently interested in the subject, that a statement was made by my hon. Friend the Member for Bridgeton (Mr. Maxton) on a previous occasion as to what our attitude would be in the case of Hitler's Government seeking arms from this country. It was superfluous on his part to put his question once again. If he does not like to take the trouble to make himself fully conversant with what has been going on with regard to these matters, he cannot expect us to make up for his lack of interest in the proceedings.
There is evidence that about 100,000 Italians, fully equipped by the Italian Government, are fighting in Spain on the rebel side, and we are asked in this House to pass a Bill which is going to put the Italian Government into the position of being one of the watchdogs to see that munitions do not go into Spain to their own men. The Government are taking up a preposterous position. It has been made perfectly plain that on every occasion when the forces of the Spanish Government have been getting the upper hand naval or military action by the German and Italian Governments has been responsible for Franco's forces being able to make headway. It has happened on several occasions when the Spanish Government forces have been getting the upper hand that there has been renewed and definite intervention by the German and Italian Governments in support of the rebels. The hon. Member for Stretford (Mr. Crossley) said that this is a civil war and that the people in this country were divided, one set supporting the Spanish Government and the other in favour of those who are fighting for Franco. It is a foreign invading army that is in Spain fighting against the Spanish Government, while the overwhelming majority, practically the whole, of the Spanish people are fighting against that invading force which has been carrying on war in their territory.

Mr. Crossley: I would directly contradict that statement. I believe there is an

army of nearly 200,000 or 300,000 Spanish people on his own side. I have seen vast numbers of them in training.

Mr. Stephen: The hon. Member says that he has seen vast numbers of them in training. I do not know how he discriminated between them and the Italians.

Mr. Crossley: They had all red caps.

Mr. Stephen: It is now obvious what worth can be attached to the arguments of the hon. Member. When does an Italian cease to be an Italian in Spain? Does he by putting on a red cap become a Spaniard? I will leave it at that. When an army revolts in a country and the Government of that country has to depend upon what arms it can get for the working classes, that Government must have a tremendous support from the working classes if it is able to maintain itself against the military machine. If 80 per cent. of the British Army were to revolt against the Government I wonder how long the Government would last. I do not think it would last very long. I do not think it would be able to arm a sufficient number of people to put up any great defence against the Regular Army. In Spain the overwhelming majority of the people in the country are behind the Spanish Government and therefore they have been able to carry on, and I believe they will ultimately get the victory, in spite of Italy and Germany.
The policy of the Government has been proved to be an absolute imposture from the point of view of non-intervention. That proof has been provided by the hon. Member for Derby. He made an absolute stone-wall case against the Government, and I am glad that the Opposition are going into the Division Lobby against the Bill. When I hear hon. Members who profess to be great defenders of the British Empire talking in favour of the off-scourings of those countries that are in the forces of Franco, I would ask them and I would ask the Government whether they think that Mussolini and the Italian Government are risking all these Italian lives without Italy ultimately getting its price in the future if Franco and those who are associated with him are successful. I would ask the supporters of the British Empire whether they think that Hitler and the Germans are making all these contributions in support of the rebels in Spain without expecting to get the price for their support.
This National Government has been a pitiful failure, and this Bill is one more object-lesson of the way in which the Government are fumbling in handling the affairs of the nation. Their policy, even from the point of view of the Imperialism for which they are supposed to stand, is a policy that should entitle them to a place in any lunatic asylum. They are putting the workers of this country into a more and more dangerous position. The kind of policy that is embodied in this ageement and the way in which the Government have handled non-intervention is a sure way of leading to a world war in the future, when the British workers will be expected to give their lives in defence of this country again. I protest against the Government taking the line they have taken. Let the Spanish Government get arms. Let the British Government make an end of this policy of imposture, and the pretence that they are pursuing a policy of non-intervention. Let them say that they will have no more of this policy, which has proved so fruitless. Let the Spanish Government get the arms they require in order to equip the working people of Spain against the rebels who are being kept in the field by the Fascist Powers for the benefit of Fascism in the world.

7.56 p.m.

Mr. Buchanan: I beg to second the Amendment.
In doing so I hope that hon. Members will not think that we are claiming more than our share of the time available for speeches. I shall not enter into the merits or demerits of the question as to who started or who did not start the civil war in Spain. I want merely to examine the Measure as a business proposition, leaving aside the question whether the rebels of Franco are right. This is not a defensible business proposition. What about the suggested fine of £100? What would be the sentence that could be inflicted in lieu of that fine? It would be, comparatively speaking, nothing to these people. Some six weeks after the event action might be taken. In six weeks a whole area could be swept away. The hon. Member opposite admits that Italians and German troops are there, and he says that Russian and French troops are there. Let me deal with the position of the Italians. We are told that

there are Italians fighting on both sides. Does the hon. Member think that it is human to expect the Italians to stop the necessary arms going to their friends? Nobody really expects that. It will not be done. It will not be done by Germany, and nobody seriously expects it.
Will the Bill fulfil its object? No one can defend it as a business proposition. If it had been applied to our social life we should have knocked lumps out of the Bill. If the Government are going to carry on this policy, let them not insult the House of Commons with a Bill like this. The Parliamentary Secretary to the Board of Trade gave a lucid and capable explanation of the Bill, but he never once faced up to the impossibility of the Bill. He did not look at its defects. He said that we needed some kind of machinery and he hoped to make it workable. I shall give my vote against the Bill for many reasons, but my chief reason is that, apart from the merits or demerits of the struggle, this Bill will serve the purpose of the Germans and the Italians, but it will be against the interests of the people of Spain. For these and other reasons I shall vote against the Bill.

8.0 p.m.

The Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs (Viscount Cranborne): This is not, strictly speaking, a Debate on foreign affairs. On 2nd March we had a Debate on the foreign situation, in which my right hon. Friend the Foreign Secretary spoke of the new agreement of the Non-Intervention Committee to cover the prohibition of the despatch of volunteers and also of the scheme of observation which was being prepared. Many hon. Members expressed their views on these questions. I would like to say on behalf of my right hon. Friend that he is sorry not to be able to be present to-night as he had intended, but hon. Members will be aware that the visit of the Swedish Foreign Minister is occupying my right hon. Friend, and he has therefore asked me to take his place, inadequately I admit. To-day we are concerned not so much with main principles of policy as with a technical Bill and normally a representative of the Foreign Office would not speak. There is, however, one point of a semi-technical character about which I want to say a word. It has been


raised in Questions during the last few days and was raised by the hon. Member for North Cumberland (Mr. W. Roberts), who asked what would be the position with regard to ships which were chartered by General Franco or the Spanish Government and became temporarily of Spanish nationality. He asked whether they would come within the scope of the scheme. They do not; but I fully recognise that it is an important and material point, which, I can assure the House, is being carefully considered to see whether some arrangement can be made.
I rose to speak only because certain wider issues have been raised which involve general questions of foreign policy and I thought the House might expect to have a few words on these questions as to the point of view of the Foreign Office. As I understand the position, hon. Members opposite are not in principle opposed to non-intervention; that is to say, they would agree that the affairs of Spain should be the concern of the people of Spain. On that general basis there is a wide measure of agreement between us and, therefore, I hope anything I shall say will not be regarded as provocative. We want to emphasise the amount of agreement there is between us, not the amount of difference. Hon. Members opposite, in general, are in favour of the principle of non-intervention as I have defined it, but they have considerable preoccupation with regard to the effects of that policy. Their pre-occupations, I understand, arise from an apprehension lest this policy of non-intervention may, in fact, militate against the Spanish Government, lest it should, in fact, act as intervention against the Spanish Government. That apprehension has been visible in many of their speeches in the past, and was clearly visible in the speech of the hon. Member for Derby (Mr. Noel-Baker). He said that the Non-Intervention Agreement had not been effective and that the violations of it had been flagrant. In particular, he drew attention to the Italian forces who are now fighting in Spain. With a great deal of what the hon. Member said hon. Members in all parts of the House are in agreement. I wish hon. Members opposite would only believe that we dislike violations of the Non-Intervention Agreement just as much as they do.

Mr. Maxton: You take it awfully well, then.

Viscount Cranborne: It is evident that there have been violations on both sides. The only criticism I have to make on the speech of the hon. Member for Derby is that it seemed to be slightly one-sided; it did not give quite a true picture of the situation in Spain as it is to-day. Still, it is perfectly true that there have been violations on both sides. May I say one word in answer to an accusation which the hon. Member made against the Governnent? He said that we had never brought any evidence of violations before the Non-Intervention Committee. I understand that is not so, that in certain cases we did bring evidence, and notably in four proved cases, some on one side and some on the other. What was the ultimate fate of that information I cannot say, because that is a matter for the Non-Intervention Committee; but it is untrue to say that we never brought forward any evidence.

Miss Rathbone: Are we to understand that in the course of eight months' work the Non-Intervention Committee was able to discover only four proved instances of breaches of the Non-Intervention Agreement?

Viscount Cranborne: Four proved cases are four proved cases, on whichever side they are, and, in fact, they were on both sides. We do not in the least deny that violations have taken place. It is not merely that men have gone in—we all know that men have gone in, and up to 20th February that was not a breach of the agreement—we all strongly suspect that war materials have gone in. In this House we have had speeches telling us of Italian planes and German machine guns, and Russian tanks which have been seen. It is clear, I think, that violations have taken place on both sides.

Miss Wilkinson: Will the Noble Lord tell that to the Foreign Secretary as he does not seem to know it?

Viscount Cranborne: My right hon. Friend does know it. But I should like to ask hon. Members opposite what would be the position if there had been no Non-Intervention Agreement at all? As I understand it there would have been wholesale assistance given to both sides by anybody who sympathised with them, and, apart from the danger that would have created of the war spreading throughout Europe—a very real danger


which hon. Members opposite do not seem to realise sufficiently—indeed, the hon. Member for Derby in the course of his long and full speech never mentioned it at all, although it was the original reason why M. Blum asked us to co-operate—apart, however, from this danger, would it in fact have helped the Valencia Government? The implication of the speech of the hon. Member for Derby was that the Valencia Government would have been better off. Frankly, I do not believe they would have been.

Mr. Cocks: They think so themselves.

Viscount Cranborne: They may think so. Men would have gone in just as they have now, and arms would have gone in in far greater quantities than now. There is a suggestion by hon. Members opposite that this country alone should have poured in arms to the Spanish Government to such an enormous amount that it would have completely redressed the balance. I understood the hon. Member for Derby to say that we ought to have sold arms to the legitimate Government. That rests on the assumption that we have got an enormous surplus pool of arms available to be sold to any country in the world; that we have a sort of widow's cruse out of which we can always pour guns, rifles and ammunition. That is not the case. Some of us wish, from the point of view of collective security, that it was the case, but it is not, and that is why the Government are asking for their re-armament programme, which they regretfully feel to be necessary. We have certain existing contracts with foreign Powers which we are doing our utmost to fulfil, but the overwhelming proportion of the arms we can produce is needed by us. On the other hand, there are some other nations, which I hope I need not specify, which seem to be remarkably well supplied with arms; and where now under the Non-Intervention Agreement, a trickle, comparatively speaking, goes through, if there had been no Non-Intervention Agreement, a flood of arms would have gone through, and it would not necessarily have benefited the Spanish Government. Hon. Members opposite may not accept that view as coming from a junior member of the Government, but I would point out to them that it is the view taken by the "Daily Herald" in a leading article two days ago. The hon.

Member for Derby would call it impartial, because it says some things with which he does not agree and some things with which I do not agree. In this article the "Daily Herald" said:
Can it be doubted that, short of European war (and if that is proposed, then out with it), the only hope of preventing the further landing of divisions of the Italian army in Spain is the naval control.
Hon. Members opposite are now opposing naval control.
During the period before non-intervention in arms did not the rebels profit more than the Government?
Do hon. Members want to bring back that state of affairs?
Is not the Italian army now attacking Madrid the practical demonstration of how 'Free Trade' in volunteers has worked out?
By this Bill we are trying to give protection.
And if non-intervention were now abandoned, is it not certain that the Fascists would pour men into Spain until a Government defeat were assured?
That is an admirable review of the situation and answers the speeches of hon. Members opposite. I do not want to be provocative, but I hope they will believe that the Government are no more satisfied than they are with the present position, and that we shall never be satisfied until we see every foreigner off the soil of Spain. At any rate, we honestly believe that by this agreement the dam which the Non-Intervention Agreement provides will be extended and strengthened. Moreover, except for one report which, as my right hon. Friend said today, is being urgently examined, we have no reason to suppose that this new agreement is being violated. The hon. Member for Derby assumed that it was being violated, but he gave no evidence, and except for this one case, on which we have frankly given the House all the information we have, I know of no evidence that the new agreement is being violated.
My right hon. Friend and I are almost constantly being twitted by hon. Members opposite for our lack of information. Some hon. Members opposite seem to think that the Foreign Office is singularly inefficient, and others seem to think that we are deliberately dishonest. Perhaps they will forgive me when I say that to us they sometimes seem to be either irresponsibly credulous or deliberately


blind to the realities of the situation. Some hon. Members will remember that there used to be newspaper posters all over London, "If it is in John Bull, it is true," and it seems to me that that is the principle on which a great many hon. Members opposite work. They seem to think that if anything is put in the Press it must be true; they are not always certain about the "Daily Herald"—sometimes they are a little doubtful about that—but if it is in the "Times" or the "Daily Telegraph," they say it must be true, and they come straight to the House and put down a number of questions or make speeches calling upon the Government to confirm the statements in the Press. If the Government do not confirm them, they say that we are either dishonest or incapable.
I ask hon. Members opposite to consider the circumstances in which this information has to be obtained. War conditions exist in Spain, and although it is true that we have representatives there, they are only in certain towns, for it would be impossible to have masses of inquiring Englishmen strewn throughout the country. Although we receive reports, they are not always comprehensive, and in the nature of things cannot be so, and sometimes they reduplicate one another —a man in one town may see what he believes to be a group of Italians, that group may go to another town and may be seen there by another man. Consequently, when we say that we cannot give the House accurate and comprehensive information—[Interruption.] It is all very well for hon. Members to laugh, but we are telling the truth, and it is they who are out of touch with all realities. The hon. Member for Derby was not hampered by any such conditions, for in his brilliant speech, which I am sure we all considered a remarkable performance, he always seemed to have obtained any information he wanted to get, and his only requirement was that it should all be on one side. He painted a brilliant picture; the only fault was that it was not true to life, and I took that to be due to the fact that he had left out all the red.

Sir S. Cripps: Will the Noble Lord tell us what is the red to which he refers?

Viscount Cranborne: It is the colour I see the hon. and learned Gentleman

the Member for East Bristol (Sir S. Cripps).

Sir S. Cripps: Is the Noble Lore referring to the Spanish Government?

Viscount Cranborne: Hon. Members have asked for exact information with regard to foreigners in Spain, but I submit that there are two things which are much more important than that. The first is that we should prevent any more foreigners going in—I am sure hon. Members will agree with that—and the second is that the foreigners who are there at present should be withdrawn as soon as possible. The first step has already been taken by the Non-Intervention Committee, and I suggest that to its effective fulfilment the Bill which is before the House is an essential contribution. I hope the Bill will be passed through all its stages with the least possible delay. I understood the hon. Member for Derby to say that hon. Members opposite will go into the Division Lobby against the Bill, and he put forward the alternative suggestion that before this Bill is passed, or the agreement put into operation, His Majesty's Government should take the matter before the League of Nations. I am not clear as to why His Majesty's Government should take it before the League of Nations. I thought the hon. Member for Derby showed himself to be an internationalist only in the sense that he wanted us to do everybody else's business.
Hon. Members opposite are constantly speaking of the Spanish Government and saying that it ought to be supported because it is a member of the League. There is nothing to prevent the Spanish Government putting its case before the Council of the League. If in this country we had a civil war in which there was foreign intervention, I am certain we would not desire or expect the Spanish Government to put our case before the League, but would be ready to do so ourselves. If the Spanish Government puts its case before the League, I assure hon. Members opposite that we, who are a permanent member of the Council, will be only too ready to give serious and objective consideration to the points which the Spanish Government may put forward. I do not think it is for us to do a piece of work which is the job of the Spanish Government. The fact that a matter may come before the League


at any future time does not justify hon. Gentlemen opposite in voting against the Bill.
Before they do that, they must be able to prove, in the first place, that the new agreement on volunteers has been violated. The whole of their case rests upon the allegation that the agreement is being violated, and that therefore it is of no use, because it will militate against the Spanish Government. They have not given one piece of evidence to prove that allegation. The hon. Member for Derby quoted figures, but they were all prior to 20th February, and until he can prove that the agreement has been violated, he has no argument against the Bill. Secondly, hon. Members opposite must prove that the situation of the Spanish Government will be made worse by this Bill. They have not been able to do that, and indeed I think I have been able to prove, by quoting extensively from the "Daily Herald," that if this Bill is not passed, the situation of the Spanish Government will be far worse. Our case for the Bill is that it will help to stop volunteers going to Spain. There is no evidence that it will not stop them altogether, but even if it does not quite do so, it will immensely reduce the numbers. If this scheme is not put into force, it will, I believe, hurt the Valencia Government more than the other side, and surely that is not the object of hon. Members opposite.
I agree that this agreement with regard to volunteers is not enough, as the hon. Member for Derby said. It is essential that there should be a withdrawal of foreigners from Spain, if we can get an international agreement on that. As hon. Members know, that matter is under immediate consideration, and His Majesty's Government will do anything they can in that direction. In the meantime, if the war is to be limited and shortened, it is essential to take this first step to prevent more foreigners going to Spain, and I believe this Bill is a considerable contribution to that end. I would remind the House of a very old proverb—" Half a loaf is better than no bread." This Bill is not a whole loaf, but it is half a loaf, and I hope the House will accept it. I believe hon. Gentlemen opposite will incur a very heavy moral responsibility if they do not vote for the Bill.

8.25 p.m.

Miss Wilkinson: The Under-Secretary has said that half a loaf is better than no bread, but I would remind him that half a watch is not necessarily better than no watch. Our difficulty in regard to his speech, which was an example of Oxford Union debating in the best Cecilian style, is that like most Oxford Union debating it cleverly avoided the point at issue. The Noble Lord said truly that we on this side were not opposed to non-intervention. What we are opposed to is a farce that pretends to be non-intervention but which works overwhelmingly on one side. The Noble Lord never once met our contention with regard to this point, except by saying that there had been intervention on both sides. He seems to think that we are afraid to pronounce the word "Russia." Let us get down to the facts. I do not know exactly what is the time lag with regard to Foreign Office information, but we find the Noble Lord and his right hon. Friend the Foreign Secretary coming down here and for a certain number of weeks denying that they have any information that a particular lot of interventionist troops have been engaged. But when a number of the interventionist troops have been killed by the loyalist militia, then we find the Noble Lord and his right hon. Friend making speeches which assume that those people—whose presence in Spain they had been denying for weeks—were really there all the time and had been killed, and so he and his right hon. Friend get ready to say that they have no information about a second lot of interventionists.

Viscount Cranborne: The hon. Lady is not quite fair to me. She will remember a question which she herself asked with regard to the entry of troops into Malaga. On that occasion we said that there was a mixed force, including 3,000 Italians, and they were not at all dead, but were in full activity.

Miss Wilkinson: Yes, and fighting the battle of the Noble Lord's interventionist friends. Even the Noble Lord would find it difficult to deny the presence of troops when the Press of the world was ringing with stories of what they are doing and of the appalling way in which they were treating the refugees who were getting away from Malaga. I do not think the Noble Lord can pride himself on that particular admission, and for the rest we


have had this time lag of which I speak —this period between the time when the Noble Lord and his right hon. Friend go on denying, until the time when they have to admit the presence of one lot and prepare to deny the presence of the next lot. Will the Noble Lord acknowledge that during the whole of that period before the end of October, which was the time when the first Russian contingent arrived, he and the Foreign Secretary were denying and denying and Denying that there were any Italian or Gorman troops there? But the moment the first trickle of Russian help began to appear, then the Noble Lord was perfectly happy to assure us that both sides were equally at fault.
I do not know whether the Noble Lord can produce evidence to justify what was almost the aspersion which he cast on the most dignified representatives of his own Press, but it would appear that while denying any veracity to the correspondents of the "Times" and the "Daily Telegraph" he is prepared to accept the anonymous leader of the "Daily Herald" as something like Holy Writ. One is glad to notice this movement in the right direction, or should I say in this case in the Left direction, on the part of the Noble Lord? I have been reading the Press carefully on this subject, and as far as I can gather no one has suggested that there are any Russian troops fighting in Spain. I do not know whether the Noble Lord extends to the "Daily Mail" the objection which he appears to have to other organs of the Conservative Press on this subject, but one would gather from the "Daily Mail" that the entire Russian Army is fighting in Spain. Apart from that, however, no one has said that there are Russian troops there, although it cannot be denied that tanks and aeroplanes and technical assistance from Russia have been employed. But is the Noble Lord aware of the fact that all that assistance, plus the very real volunteers of the international force on the Government side, is nothing like the amount of assistance that—even if we take the time lag admissions of the Noble Lord and his right hon. Friend—has been forthcoming on the other side from the Italians?
Why have we this Bill at all? We are not only discussing the situation in Spain, we are discussing the proposals in this Bill. What is the whole story of

non-intervention—and I am not now referring to what has happened in Spain but to what has happened in this House, because that is our concern. The Government may justify their attitude on nonintervention on the ground that it is a necessary policy. But it seems to me that, in the interests of international decency, it would be better to admit the facts about non-intervention instead of putting the Foreign Secretary and the Noble Lord to what they must regard as the rather distasteful task of having to go through the motions of denying what they know to be true.
What are the plain facts? The Left Government in Spain had only one advantage against the rebel officers—who, on the whole, were backed by the rich—and that was the power to buy arms. It was never contemplated, however, when the international law grew up by which a Government was given the right to buy arms to preserve law and order within its own frontiers, that a workers' Government would ever be in control of a country and exercise that power. But when the occasion arose on which a workers' Government had that advantage, we set up a Non-Intervention Committee to neutralise their advantage. That is the whole story of this Non-Intervention Committee. A Government of the Left was in control of the finances of the country, and had been put there by the country's votes. Therefore, it was necessary to neutralise their power to buy arms, and that has been the sole purpose of our non-intervention. Nothing that the Non-Intervention Committee has done has prevented one gun or one aeroplane from reaching Spain. It has, however, done one thing. It has made it necessary for the Italian Government to call their troops "nationals" when they are in Spain. Judging by an answer given by the Foreign Secretary earlier to-day, when he would not allow me to use the word "troops" and substituted the word "nationals," apparently "nationals" is an alias for foreign troops in Spain just as "National" in this country is an alias for Conservative.
To come back to the Bill there was, of course, a new situation when Russia started to send in war material. Then we have this Merchant Shipping Bill to neutralise the possibility of Russia sending material to the Spanish Government,


exactly as the previous activities of the Non-Intervention Committee neutralised the original advantage of the Spanish Government. That is the meaning of this Bill. It is difficult, of course, to regard the Noble Lord as Machiavellian. He sounds charming and looks most disarming, but he must allow a certain ability to those on this side of the House to put two and two together and to find that they do not always make five. We have to take the obvious deduction from the Government's action. I have read this scheme through with the utmost care, and I cannot find anything in it that is going to prevent the Italian troops doing anything in Spain that they want to do.
An answer was given by the Noble Lord yesterday or on Monday in which he said that it was legitimate for a ship in general to change flags in order to avoid capture. Leaving aside the ships that could transfer to the flag of any other nation than the 27 nations included in this scheme, an Italian ship, for instance, has only to be provided with an ample supply of the flags of General Franco and to go to that coast which the Italians, warm friends of General Franco's, have under observation—

Viscount Cranborne: I understand that the observers who will be put on board these ships will be appointed by the committee, not by the different Governments.

Miss Wilkinson: The point is that they cannot interfere with a ship that is flying the flag of one of the countries outside the 27 nations in question.

Viscount Cranborne: On this particular point about flags, perhaps the hon. Lady will put her question to the Board of Trade, because I have not got the details, but I recognise that that point is very important—the point about the chartering of ships by General Franco—and it is being carefully examined at the present time. It is a very important point for the success of the scheme.

Miss Wilkinson: I am glad that we have had from the Noble Lord that admission, that this is what could be described as a big loophole in the Bill, but it seems to me to render this Bill nugatory. The Noble Lord admits in substance that you can drive a coach and

horses through the Bill by a simple transference of flags.

Viscount Cranborne: I did not say that I admitted that. I said that it was a point which I believed was being dealt with by the President of the Board of Trade in his reply. It is a point more for the Board of Trade than for the Foreign Office.

Miss Wilkinson: I agree with the Noble Lord. He is very wise in trying to put the paternity of this infant on the Board of Trade and to get out of results that might be most inconvenient to the Foreign Office. However, if the President of the Board of Trade is going to reply, I want to ask him whether he will deal with this point, because it seems to me that either this thing is going to be effective., or else any ship can go through it, provided that it goes to the coast that is being watched by the side to which it belongs. There is another incredible side to this Bill, that the two countries, particularly Italy, which are regarded as among the chief offenders should be given the coast to watch that is nearest their own shores.
A previous speaker on the benches opposite sneered because Russia had not come into this guarding of the coast scheme, but it must be admitted that since Russia does not deny that she is helping the loyal troops, she has been both honest and internationally decent in refusing to come into that scheme. Therefore, it surely would seem that since the three main countries concerned are Russia, on the one side, and Italy and Germany on the other, if Russia does not come in, the only decent thing to have done would have been to have eliminated Italy and Germany from the coast-watching scheme. Can anybody justify the putting of the coast-watching in the Mediterranean in Italian hands—that is to say, that a ship, so long as it flies the flag of a nation outside the 27 countries in the scheme, or General Franco's flag, can go to a coast where there is no other watching than by those people whose whole interest it is to allow stuff through for their friends in Spain? There ought to be some action taken in that matter.
I listened to the statement made by the Parliamentary Secretary to the Board of Trade this evening. which simply went round and round every single point. It


was a clever speech, but it was an insult to the intelligence of this House. This zoning scheme simply reduces this country to the position of taking part in a plan for providing that everything is done that can be done to interfere on one side; and then they send the Noble Lord here to make pretty speeches to cover up the fact of the farce that this non-intervention scheme really is.

8.42 p.m.

Lieut.-Colonel Sandeman Allen: A great deal of criticism has been levelled at the Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs in regard to lack of information on the part of the Foreign Office, but I would remind the House that in the last two General Elections the information received by the Socialist party was extremely inefficient and small; and to get information in time of war is a very different matter indeed. If I may bring the House down, to use the words in the scheme, to the "focal area," I would like to deal with the machinery of the Bill rather than with the reasons for the Bill. We all admired the clarity and lucidity with which the Parliamentary Secretary to the Board of Trade moved the Second Reading of the Bill, and I hope that this House will see its way to pass the Bill, as being a real contribution towards a settlement of the very sad state of affairs which exists in Spain and towards the peace of the world.
This Bill is being hastened through Parliament. It is going through all its stages in both Houses, I understand, in 14 days or less, and in those circumstances extra care is undoubtedly necessary to see that no serious mistakes are made. This is a novel and an exceptional Bill, involving more control over the coasts of a country which is in a state of war. The powers of the Board of Trade in this Bill to alter legislation once we have passed it are very great indeed. That is admitted, and the Government have put in certain safeguards. To my mind, the necessity for this Bill should not last a very long time, but circumstances are most extraordinary at all times. One never knows how they are going to shift from day to day, and it might easily be that this Bill may be required for a longer period than is anticipated. Would it not be possible for the President of the Board of Trade to consider making this Bill function for

only 12 months, so that it could then again come before the House for discussion in the dire event of its continued necessity 12 months hence? I am certain that this House does not like parting with such enormous powers to a Government Department, and I hope that that suggestion will be considered.
The necessity for this Bill is political, and undoubtedly a certain burden will he placed upon the shipping industry. I think the House ought to be very careful to see that no single industry should he picked out to bear a special burden for a special purpose of national importance, and that there should not be too much cost to the shipping industry involved in this Bill. The results of this action of the International Board will undoubtedly prove the innocence of Great Britain in the matter of supplying munitions of war or volunteers to Spain. I would ask the President of the Board of Trade to be careful that any regulations affecting British steamers are not more onerous upon British shipping than any regulations brought in by foreign Governments. There should be equity of treatment as between the vessels of our country and the vessels of any foreign country.
I should like to ask also whether any alternative scheme has been considered. There was, I understand, an alternative scheme put forward, but has it received serious consideration and what is the position in regard to it? The case of the steamship "Springwear," which was ordered into Gibraltar, shows the advisability of using an alternative scheme. The "Springwear" is owned by the Springwell Steamship Company. The directors of that company are men of the highest integrity and honesty. That ship was ordered into Gibraltar and had to discharge its cargo, which was examined. It was found that there were no munitions and that it was innocent of any contravention of international regulations. Who had to pay the demurrage and the cost of discharging that cargo and examining it? Have the steamship owners, who have turned out to be innocent, to bear the financial burden, and what will happen in future if similar cases arise? The alternative scheme, I understand, was that observers should be at the place of loading of a steamer that is bound for Spain, and it seems to me to be a much simpler arrangement. If the alternative scheme


should prove to be more attractive, am I right in saying that Clause 3 will give the President of the Board of Trade power to turn over to that scheme, should it be agreed upon by the board?
I was glad to hear from the Under-Secretary that action was going to be simultaneous between all the principal competing Powers. I look upon that as very important, but I hope that all the notice possible will be given to shipowners of the date of starting this scheme. The costs to shipowners will be fairly considerable and they come under two heads. First, the shipowner has to make arrangement for the necessary deviation arranged for under the Bill. He has possibly to arrange for extra supplies to his bunkers and for his food supplies on board. He has obligations to arrange with his agents and customers for whom he is carrying. He may have specified dates by which to deliver; he may have obtained his orders by having given specified dates, and those dates in the contracts might easily be broken. Demurrage will be incurred, for which I see no provision in the Bill, and there may be liabilities unknown. The liabilities under paragraph zo of the White Paper are not very serious, but it says:
No payment will be made from the International Fund referred to in paragraph 52 below to shipowners in respect of delay or diversion occasioned by the necessity to embark or disembark Observing Officers,
provided the administrators carry out the drill correctly. It says that no payment will be made. It may be said that shipowners will not suffer but will get money from the clubs. If the draw-out is too large, then surely the clubs will increase the amount of money they will get from the shipowner and in the long run the shipowners will have to pay. That is the matter for consideration by the House. Paragraph 17 in the White Paper says:
The Observing Officers will be carried on the same conditions with regard to liability for life and property as are passengers on the vessel in question.
I cannot see anything in the Bill to implement that paragraph, and I would like some assurance from the President of the Board of Trade that there is no such liability. I can see no reason why a shipowner should be held liable in law for the same risks with regard to the observers whom they are compelled to

carry as a national duty in order to carry out an international duty as they are with regard to passengers. The expenses that are liable to be incurred by the shipowner come largely under Clause i, Subsection (6), and they are dealt with in the White Paper in paragraph i6. Clause 1, Sub-section (6), says:
An Observing Officer carried in a ship in pursuance of this Act shall, while on board the ship, be entitled to be provided with subsistence and accommodation, and to require signals to be made and to require messages to be sent by wireless telegraphy.
It states in paragraph 16 of the White Paper that shipowners will be placed under an obligation to provide messing similar to that provided for the master of the ship or first-class passengers. I see now that it states that payment will be made for that, and, therefore, that meets my point. In Sub-section (8) of Clause r it is stated that the Board of Trade "may" make regulations as to payment for subsistence and accommodation. I think it ought to be stronger than "may." The shipowner is entitled to have his expenses paid. The same word "may" applies to the payment of tolls and dues and rates or charges incurred by a ship, but I hold that the powers of the Board of Trade should not be optional, and that we should say that they "shall" make regulations providing for payment. Whether the words "may" and "shall" have the same meaning in this case is a point for one of the legal Members of the House, and I should be glad to get information upon it for nothing from the hon. and learned Member for East Bristol (Sir S. Cripps). Will he tell me?

Sir S. Cripps: Certainly.

Lieut.-Colonel Sandeman Allen: Then the point was a good one to make. Here is a really technical point which I hope the President of the Board of Trade will be able to answer. Take the case of a charter party—I do not mean by charter party the avoidance of the British flag, but a charter under the British flag. In the case of a charter from, say, London to Barcelona, the insurance policy normally says that the voyage must be a direct one without deviation; and if there be deviation to a second port the insurance policy is invalidated. I want to ask, Is the onus to be on the owner of the steamship to insert a provision in the contract to cover that point, or will


the existence of this Bill, when it becomes an Act, free him from that necessity? It is an important point, and I hope that my right hon. Friend will be able to clear up the difficulty in my mind. In paragraph 21 of the White Paper we find that representatives of the Governments of the countries in which the observation ports are situated will consult with one another with a view to reaching agreement on behalf of their respective Governments:
(a) for the exemption, on a mutual basis, of ships calling at these ports merely for the purpose of embarking and disembarking observing officers from dues and other charges (excluding pilotage) normally paid by ships entering those ports, or (b) if this is not possible for the reduction of these charges.
Would it not be possible for this country to give a specific lead in this matter by stating at which of our ports the vessels will be exempt from dues? Further, may I presume that the retention of the right to charge pilotage dues does not imply compulsory pilotage except where pilotage is compulsory—I mean that pilotage is not to be made compulsory where it is not already compulsory. In this matter of deviation, with all its difficulties and expenses, I hope that the Board and the Board of Trade will see that the charges falling on an industry which is largely finding things difficult enough, especially in the Spanish trade, shall be reduced to a minimum.
Paragraph 12 of the White Paper deals with the picking up of observers, and I see difficulties there which ought to be cleared up. For example, the normal route of the Pacific Steam Navigation Company's vessels to South America is via Corunna and the Azores. If those vessels have to pick up an observer I think Brest is the port they would use under the terms of paragraph 12 (d) of the White Paper. When a vessel clears from Corunna for South America via the Azores to what port will she have to return her observing officer? The nearest French port is Bordeaux, but that will mean a deviation of 500 miles there and 500 miles back, adding 1,000 miles to the voyage. If the vessel is deviated to Lisbon that will be 300 miles both ways, and, besides, Lisbon is an extremely dangerous and difficult port for vessels which do not go there regularly, especially large vessels, being, indeed, a dangerous port at all times, because of the liability

to stranding. I believe that Oporto is only 200 miles away, but that is equally dangerous. What is to be the position in those circumstances? I do not want to enlarge on this aspect of the matter, but I could give examples of other voyages. What I want the House to realise is that there ought to be the utmost elasticity in the working of this Measure. The International Board and the Board of Trade are using the best available brains in working things out, and I am certain that they will pay close attention to these important points. I notice that Sub-section (3) of Clause 1 of the Bill differs in its wording from paragraph 18 of the White Paper. The Sub-section says:
When any ship to which the Act of 1936 applies … leaves a port or place in Spanish territory bound to any port or place not in Spanish territory, she shall proceed to the prescribed place taking the shortest available route thereto unless otherwise agreed.
Paragraph 18 of the White Paper says that the administrator at an observation port will have the right to require the master of a ship which has embarked observing officers:
To disembark them at any port which would not entail an unreasonable deviation after the vessel has finally quitted Spanish waters. To this end the master of such a ship will be put under an obligation to disembark the observing officers (at the discretion of the administrator or deputy administrator at the port of embarkation) either at the observation port nearest to the route that the master intends to follow after leaving Spanish waters or at any other port which does not entail more than 50 sea miles additional steaming.
So far as I can see, the wording of the Bill might entail a journey of considerably more than 50 miles; but again I hope that I shall be reassured by my right hon. Friend, whose knowledge on this subject is much greater than my own.

Dr. Burgin: The hon. and. gallant Member should read the proviso.

Lieut.-Colonel Sandeman Allen: I thank the hon. Gentleman for that suggestion. I had overlooked it. Another point on which I should like information is what is to happen in case one of the countries concerned should retire from this work. Is our sphere of operations to be extended, is our coast watch to be lengthened? Is there any possibility that at some time ours may be the only country carrying out this work? Is there any provision to meet the situation after a certain number of nations have dropped


out, so that we shall not be left holding this rather difficult and costly baby? Further, I should like to know just as a matter of curiosity on the part of a back bencher, why our Government have made themselves responsible for payment of 80 per cent. of the cost of the special arrangements in Portugal, the remaining 20 per cent. being paid by the Portuguese Government? Why are not France, Germany, Italy and other nations paying their quota? Why should we be the only ones to pay? I have asked a number of questions on this Bill, but I hope it will be interpreted only as an indication of my anxiety that the Bill shall prove to be a really useful one. Those questions have not been put by reason of any hostility to the Bill. I should like to give my assurance to my right hon. Friend who is in charge of the Bill that I consider that he is on the right track, but we ought to make the machine we are using as perfect as possible, and I wish to give him the strongest support for the passing of this Measure.

9.3 p.m.

Lieut.-Commander Fletcher: The Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs made us an extremely attractive speech in which he admirably carried out the mission with which he had obviously been charged, namely, to tell the House nothing at all. In the course of his remarks he said that hon. Members on these benches always attributed either the ignorance of a fool or the deceit of a knave to the Foreign Office. I must confess that in the past I have entertained both those dark thoughts myself, but I do not really believe that either of them is true, though I believe that the Foreign Office under stress and strain often resort to taking on the protective colour of ignorance. The Bill which we are discussing and the variety of questions which are addressed to the Foreign Secretary on every day on which the Foreign Office is open to bombardment are an indication of the very great strain which is being borne at the present time, not only by those who speak for the Foreign Office in this House, but by the whole personnel of the Foreign Office as a result of the unprecedented complexity and anxiety of the international situation at this moment.
I would most sincerely like to acknowledge the care and courtesy with which questions are answered, in spite of that strain. In reply to a question which I put to the Prime Minister the other day, he told me that we had not the benefit of the presence of the Air Minister in this House because of the strain to which the Air Minister is being subjected at the present time. On that analogy I should not be surprised to hear that our Foreign Secretary was going to another place. If Ministers discover that the way to get out of being heckled and cross-examined in this House is to tell a tale of strain to the Prime Minister, they will all be keeping strain charts over their beds in future, in order that they may get into a less exacting atmosphere.
The Minister who introduced the Bill has received a great many compliments to-night upon the clarity and lucidity with which he did it, but I thought that he spoke with what I have heard described as the "dull competence of a homely stenographer." When he was explaining the Bill it was obvious that he himself entertained very grave doubts as to its efficacy. During the War, I had at various times to consider a great many matters and problems analogous to those raised in the Bill. In my humble opinion, the Bill will not for technical reasons work unless there is complete good faith on the part of everybody concerned; and if there is good faith on the part of everybody concerned you do not want the Bill. As the scheme is not to come into force until 27 nations have come into line about it, I cannot help feeling that there is a chance that it may never come into force at all.

Lieut.-Commander Sandeman Allen: Is not that rather in contradiction of what the Bill is proposing to do? The major nations, in consultation with each other, are reducing the number to about seven. It does not matter about Latvia, for instance.

Lieut.-Commander Fletcher: If the hon. and gallant Member will look at the OFFICIAL REPORT to-morrow, he will see that my words have reproduced very faithfully the words of the Minister in introducing the Bill. I took them down at the time. The last thing I want to do is to misrepresent him. The real point of the Bill is this: Is Mussolini likely to watch his plans in Spain going wrong,


if a few more men and some more munitions would enable him to achieve success? Will not that forceful, able and unscrupulous man be able to find some way of evading the provisions of the Bill? Matters of prestige may become involved. Suppose the Italian troops in Spain meet with defeats so that Italian prestige and honour become involved; will Signor Mussolini be deterred by the Bill, or by anything that the Non-Intervention Committee may do, from endeavouring to wipe out the stain from the Italian name? Let us remember also that the head of the Italian Government has declared that he will not tolerate the establishment of any government in Catalonia which is incompatible with Italian political ideas. In face of such considerations as those, how can we expect that the Bill would be effective? The Bill and the scheme in the White Paper obviously leave wide loopholes for evasion in every direction. This is a face-saving Bill, and the Minister has very little faith in it, but was obviously trying to put the best gloss on it that he could.
My hon. Friend the Member for Derby (Mr. Noel-Baker) said that he felt "doubt and grave misgivings" about the Bill. I can share his grave misgivings, but I have no doubts about the Bill. It will not do what it is intended to do or give justice to the Spanish Government. That Government has been denied her rights in International Law from the beginning of this business. It has been left to the Ambassador of the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics to expose the humbug of the Non-Intervention Committee. Our Government have burked all the issues which have been raised. Their conduct has been cringing and cowardly and as usual they have betrayed Democracy. Under the control arrangement outlined in the Bill, German and Italian warships will, I suppose, have a happy time leading double lives, stopping the arms of the Government of Spain by day and shelling the Government troops by night. Does anyone seriously imagine that German and Italian warships are going to assist at sea in undoing the work which their armies and their air forces are performing on shore? The idea is ridiculous.
The Fascist Powers have objected to air control. They have so handled matters that from 70,000 to 100,000 Italian troops were in Spain before they

agreed to the ban on volunteers. In spite of what we have heard to-night, does the Under-Secretary of State deny the reports that Italian troops were landed in Spain after Italy had given her consent to a so-called ban? There are circumstantial reports of two landings of Italian troops in Spain since then. The Noble Lord asked us for proof about it; how can we prove it from these Opposition benches? We have not got access to official reports. Have the Government no information? Have they received no reports at all from their consular officers in Spain. Have they no intelligence service in Spain, and no Secret Service operating there?

Vice-Admiral Taylor: The hon. and gallant Gentleman is putting before the House as a fact that Italian troops have landed in Spain after the signing of the Agreement, but if he has no proof of it, how can he put it forward as true?

Mr. Cocks: The Foreign Secretary's statement to-day.

Lieut.-Commander Fletcher: Listening to the hon. and gallant Gentleman I have always felt that he has his thoughts wired for sound. I am dealing with the very point he raises. Have the Government received no reports at all from the Commanding Officers of His Majesty's ships in Spanish waters? Have they issued any orders to Commanding Officers of those ships to look out for the landing of foreign troops in Spain; if so, have they had any reports? Of course, the Government have had plenty of information. I have no doubt that some of it has been true and some of it has been false, and they seem to make it a practice to act on the false information and ignore the true. Do the Government seriously deny all these circumstantial reports of the landing of Italian and German men and munitions? I know all about the Press. The Noble Lord was very contemptuous about the Press, but do papers of the reputation of the "Times" and the "Manchester Guardian" commit themselves to publishing such information unless they are satisfied about it? They know that, as responsible newspapers, they would be damned for ever, if it were proved, in the long run, that they had been deceived into publishing and giving prominence to false reports.
Speaking on this question of men and munitions, the Noble Lord made a most


absurd remark. He said that because of non-intervention only a trickle had got through to Franco. Every schoolboy knows that Franco has been saturated with munitions, and that he has more at the present time than he can find men to use them. I repeat, are these reports to be denied? What about the reports of what happened at Malaga? Will the Government deny that the bombardment of Malaga was directed by a German staff on board the "Graf von Spee"? Do they deny that Malaga was taken by a force estimated to number 20,000 Italians, thousands of Germans, and thousands of Moors, and that that victory was hailed in the Italian Press as an Italian victory? If they have no information, have the Government examined the Spanish Note of last Saturday? Have they any observations to offer upon the statements, quoted in that Note, obtained from captured Italian soldiers and officers? Do they deny those statements? Do they deny the statement that an attack by Italian and German warships on Barcelona is foreshadowed, under the pretext of watching the coast? Why should Spain be made the victim of such a scandalous violation of international law as the presence of this Italian army in Spain represents? This Bill depends upon good faith and how can one believe in the good faith of a country which is perpetrating such breaches of international law in Abyssinia and in Spain at the same time? What are our Government waiting for in order to accept the invitation of the Spanish Government in that Note to examine what are described as clear and categorical proofs of the allegations put forward by the Spanish Government?
I pass to another point. Why has the question of the removal of foreign troops from Spain suddenly become mixed up with the question of Spanish gold sent abroad by the Spanish Government? The Italian and German Notes of 25th January about the withdrawal of foreign troops said nothing at all about this gold. Have we reminded those Governments of that fact, and pointed out to them that there is no connection whatsoever between this question of Spanish gold and the removal of foreign troops? Have we reminded the Italian Government of their Note of 7th January on this subject, in which they said:

If the Governments concerned should agree, the Italian Government would be ready to give its support to the initiative.
If the foreign troops and military advisers are left in Spain to determine the result of this Spanish war, then the work of the Non-Intervention Committee, and all the control which this Bill proposes to set up, are worth exactly and precisely nothing at all.
We see in Spain the new technique of war that has been invented by the totalitarian States. There is no declaration of war and you go on talking about nonintervention while you carry the war on. It is all very well for the Government to talk about the Anglo-Italian Mediterranean Agreement, and about the status quo being protected in the Mediterranean, but I see that Franco has assured Mussolini in these words, that he "would not forget the friendly Italian hand which shook their own." I wonder how that augurs in the future for maintaining the status quo in the Mediterranean. There are powerful elements in this country which consider a victory for Franco to be the lesser of two evils, and I remember a very remarkable leading article in the "Manchester Guardian" which pointed out that opinion in this country was divided strictly along class lines, and went on to say that Franco was a type of man with whom the military and hunting set in this country would instinctively feel at home, while they would feel slightly uncomfortable with Senor Caballero. These powerful interests would sacrifice our Imperial interests in the Mediterranean to their class prejudices.
Having first of all deprived the Spanish Government of their right to buy arms, and having winked at Italian and German procrastination while Germany and Italy were pouring arms into Spain, the Government have now agreed in effect to blockade the Government of Spain, in order to remove the last possible chance of a victory for the Spanish Government. I, for one, cannot support a Bill which is only eye-wash, and which can mean nothing except harm to the Spanish Government so long as the foreign troops remain in Spain. Non-intervention, although they may deny it, was sponsored by our own Government. It has broken down, like most of our attempts in foreign affairs. It has broken down, and the responsibility lies on our Government to


show whether Hitler and Mussolini are to rule the roost in Europe, and to do as they like, or not. If we are always to beat this retreat before the dictators—this retreat which has been going on ever since the Manchuria incident—if we are to go on beating this retreat interminably before the dictators, we shall fade away as a Great Power in Europe, then, indeed, war will be inevitable.

9.23 p.m.

Duchess of Atholl: I should like to dissociate myself emphatically from the suggestion made by the hon. and gallant Member for Nuneaton (Lieut.-Commander Fletcher), and by the hon. Member for Jarrow (Miss Wilkinson) before him, that the Government have been biased against the Government in Spain. In saying this, I speak as the wife of a soldier who has felt quite clearly for many months past that a victory for the insurgent forces in Spain would be very much more disadvantageous to this country than a victory of the Government forces. I am certain that our Government have been most anxious, and have done their best, to hold the balance fairly and to be really neutral as between the two parties; but they have been faced with a terribly difficult task, and I am afraid I do not feel that I can acquit them of having been too ready—perhaps it was an intelligible mistake—to accept at its face value the assurance given them by the German Government on 8th August that they had not sent, and did not intend to send, any help to either side in Spain. I think it was probably on account of that assurance that our Government put into force the measures necessary for nonintervention—and, as I understand it, the Russian Government followed their example—at a date considerably before the date which, at least nominally, was accepted by the Governments of Italy and Germany, which already by that time were definitely sending out help to the insurgents. A day or two ago my heart was really wrung to hear, from someone who had seen it when he was in Spain, how British volunteers in the international brigade had had to face German and Italian machine guns with rifles of the 90's, and even the 80's, of the last century.

Vice-Admiral Taylor: Why were they there?

Duchess of Atholl: They had a perfect right as citizens of a free country to go there and fight.

Colonel Wedgwood: They are fighting for humanity.

Vice-Admiral Taylor: If they go and fight for either side in Spain they are doing something which they ought not to do.

Duchess of Atholl: Free men, anyhow before the Government made any announcement about the foreign Enlistment Act, had a perfect right to leave this country to fight on either side, and I greatly admire the men who are ready to go and sacrifice their lives for some cause in which they believe.

Vice-Admiral Taylor: With regard to these nationals, of whom the Noble Lady is so proud, going to fight with the Government forces, does she not know that many of these men went over there completely under false pretences?

Hon. Members: No.

Mr. McGovern: They all went out in 1914 under false pretences.

Duchess of Atholl: It is possible that some may have gone to Spain under false pretences, but not all, and I am ready, to give anybody the benefit of the doubt. It is true, as my Noble Friend said, that our own shortage of arms and equipment would not have made it possible for us to send any very considerable, supply of rifles or anything else, but I think it would have been possible for us to have sent a supply that might have, saved a good many lives, and British lives among them, and if we had not put our non-intervention measures into operation quite so early it is possible that_ Russia would not have done so and she might have sent considerable supplies to, the Spanish Government. As it is, I have no evidence to show that she sent. any supplies until October. Coming to the Bill, I was very glad to hear my Noble Friend candidly admit that he: thought this Bill only half a loaf. That gives me real hope that the Government will be vigilantly watching its operations; and will be ready to make it more watertight if they see that that is necessary.
I cannot speak with any of the expert. knowledge which has been shown by some other hon. Members, notably the


hon. and gallant Member who sat down a few minutes ago, but I cannot help feeling anxious about many parts of the Bill. Take the exclusion of the Canaries, for instance. One has heard for some time that these islands are in the hands of the insurgents and one has heard of considerable German activity there. I cannot help sharing the fears expressed by the hon. Member for Derby (Mr. Noel-Baker) that it may be possible that men and supplies will be accumulated there, which may in course of time be sent to the insurgents.
I feel moreover real anxiety about the fact that it is Italian and German ships which will be patrolling the Catalan coast. The hon. and gallant Member for Nuneaton (Lieut.-Commander Fletcher) referred to the statements made by Italian prisoners and reported in the "Times," that arrangements have been made for a bombardment of that coast. The hon. Member for Stretford (Mr. Crossley) pooh-poohed the idea that any bombardment by the ships of Germany and Italy had taken place. It is terribly difficult for any of us to know. One can only pick up a grain of fact here and there, but I feel bound to say that a few days ago I met someone who had been in Spain during most of the war, and he told us that his own car had been bombarded by a German submarine on the Catalan coast. He spoke also of bombardment by German cruisers but he said that he regarded the passive control exercised by Italian ships as something more serious even than these occasional bombardments. By passive control he meant that when a Government warship tried to attack an insurgent warship an Italian warship came in between and so the Government warship was unable to do anything. Early in the civil war the German cruiser "Deutschland" steamed backwards and forwards across the bay between a Government ship and Ceuta.
Thus there seems to be real danger of a bombardment of the Catalan coast, and I should like to ask the Government seriously to consider the proposal made by the hon. Member for Derby that there should be neutral observers on the German and Italian ships. I am sure that none of His Majesty's ships would object to neutral observers. It would be a tremendous relief to hon. Members here to

know that there were going to be competent neutral observers on the German and Italian warships. I may add a note of great anxiety as to whether these ships may not attempt to prevent ships carrying food and other stores reaching Catalonia. I speak as chairman of a committee which exists to send relief to Spain. We have been despatching various things, milk for children, foodstuffs, clothing, and lorries to help to evacuate the civilian population. It is a terrible thought that there may be delay or even the impossibility of these supplies reaching the destination where they are so urgently needed.
I wish to associate myself with the anxiety expressed by the hon. Member for North Cumberland (Mr. W. Roberts) with regard to the laying of mines. I have had a little information on that subject in the last week or so. It seems to constitute a great danger to the supplies which are being sent to innocent populations, and to ships which are evacuating refugees. Would not the Government consider sweeping up these mines? That is a task which His Majesty's Navy are thoroughly competent to perform. They have had great experience and if they could do anything of that kind it would be a very real service to the Spanish people on both sides.
Then I come to the question of the foreign troops. When I heard my Noble Friend say there was no evidence of Italian troops having been sent to Spain since 20th February, I could not help remembering that it was on 1st December that we heard of the landing of 5,000 or 6,000 German troops, and that it was as long ago as Christmas Eve that the Foreign Secretary addressed a note to the German and Italian Gevernments on this very question of sending troops. Therefore, my Noble Friend's admission, in spite of all the discussions that have taken place since Christmas Eve and the hopes that were being held out early in January that this matter would be dealt with, and the assurances given that the German and Italian Governments would stop these so-called volunteers, that they were going into Spain freely and in considerable numbers, particularly from Italy, down to 20th February, is a very serious matter.
I was very glad to hear him speak of the withdrawal of these foreign troops as


a most urgent question, and I am extremely glad to know that the Government are evidently going to address themselves most seriously to it. It is bound to be a very difficult question. I would ask the Government if they do not feel that the information which has lately reached us on the evidence of Italian prisoners, that not merely individual Italians but actually whole Italian divisions with divisional commanders are there, does not constitute something new and even more outrageous. It seems to me a clear case of aggression with which the League of Nations might well be called upon to deal. I wish to remind the Government that they and the French jointly sent a very strong Note, I believe, to the German Government when there was an anticipation of German troops being landed in Spanish Morocco and, as a result, the German troops were not sent. We have also more recently heard that a good deal of public feeling has been able to show itself actually in Germany over the losses that have been incurred by German troops in Spain, and that is said to have made the German Government rather less interested in the Spanish situation than they may have been before. That gives us some hope that by firm pressure either from the Non-Intervention Committee or through the League, it may be possible to get these foreigners withdrawn. I believe that if the peace-loving Governments show themselves resolute and united, they can do a great deal more than they sometimes fear they can. So I hope my right hon. Friend will give most serious consideration to the proposals that have been made to-night from the benches opposite and will vigilantly be on his guard to do his utmost to turn what has been called half a loaf into a complete one.

9.40 p.m.

Mr. Cocks: I congratulate the Noble Lady on her speech. We know that she has taken a very great interest in the Spanish question, and has been for some time engaged in very valuable work on behalf of the women and children there. I was pleased to hear her tribute to the gallant Englishmen of the International Brigade who are driving the Italians like a lot of sheep before them, and have added a new lustre to the fighting traditions of our race. It was a reference in quite a different style to that which was, unfortunately, made about them by the

Foreign Secretary some time ago. The Noble Lord who spoke for the Foreign Office started to suggest, as has become rather fashionable lately on the Government benches, that there is very little difference between the Opposition and the Government, and that there is a big measure of agreement between them, but in vain is the net spread in sight of the bird. I do not agree with anything that the Government has done, is doing or is likely to do in the future and I am particularly opposed to this elaborate, artificial, mischievous and malignant piece of make-believe that they have produced this evening.
I should like to say a few words about the history of non-intervention. In the first place, the phrase itself is a very misleading on, deliberately invented to suggest that anyone who is opposed to the Government's policy is in favour of intervention. As a matter of fact, we are the true non-interventionists because it is the Government, by preventing the Spanish Government having the right to purchase the arms they need for their own defence, who are intervening on the side of the rebels. When the rebellion took place last summer and General Franco and his generals seized the principal arsenals, the Spanish Government was left without the weapons it needed to maintain order and defend itself against the rebellion and, as any other Government would do, it sought to purchase those arms, with its own money, from manufacturers in foreign countries, a right which I do not think has ever been disputed before except, perhaps, in the case of Abyssinia. I am certain that, if it had been a Royalist Government faced by a rebellion of the workers, no obstacle would have been placed in their way. As it is not a Royalist but a democratic Government, every obstacle has been placed in its way. On 19th August, without waiting for the assent of Germany or Italy to the agreement, although they knew that Germany and Italy had been supplying arms continuously to the rebels, the British Government placed an embargo on all arms going from this country into Spain, with the result that no arms have gone to the Spanish Government from this country and the embargo has aided the rebels, has helped to strangle the legitimate Government, and,


in my view, it has also had the effect of prolonging the period of civil strife.
Last December when I went to Spain for the first time, the position was that the rebels were a comparatively small body of men. The usual estimate was not more than 30,000 or 35,000 General Franco's army consisted of Moors, members of the Spanish Foreign Legion of the officer class, a few Carlists and Fascists, assisted by German and Italian artillerists and tanks and, above all, German and Italian aeroplanes. The Spanish Government, on the other hand, had an enormous reserve of marl-power. Signor Caballero told me himself that, if they could be supplied with arms, they could raise an army of 500,000 men which would sweep Franco into the sea in three weeks, and I believe they could have done it then. The whole population of Spain under the control of the Government was behind them, but they had hardly any arms. We saw men and women in Madrid marching to the front amid scenes of great enthusiasm, but only the first 20 or 30 were armed with rifles. The rest were armed with clubs, swords, hatchets, and weapons of that kind. The spirit of the people was magnificent, but as was once said of the Charge of the Light Brigade, it might be magnificent, but it was not war. To send people out to face a modern army with machine guns, rifles, aeroplanes and modern machines almost without arms at all was really inviting them to commit suicide. Thousands of these men and women are dead to-day who might have been alive and victorious were it not for the policy of His Majesty's Government. It is for the deaths of these men and women and the prolongation of the period of strife that I say the Government have a very heavy responsibility.
There has never been an embargo at all on General Franco's side. From the beginning arms have poured in continuously to the rebels from Germany and from Italy; they came even before the rebellion. If it had not been for the Italian and the Junker aeroplanes, Franco could not have got his Moors over the Straits of Gibraltar into Seville, because he had not then the command of the sea. It was because of these aeroplanes that he was able to bring the Moors over and mobilise them on the

Spanish front. It was because of these weapons coming in that he was able to make his celebrated march up to the walls of Madrid. To illustrate how the embargo has worked and to answer the Noble Lord's suggestion that the embargo would be a help to the Valencia Government rather than to the rebels—and I think it is a very striking instance—when the rebellion started, 75 per cent. of the Spanish Air Force remained loyal to the Government. They had a majority in the air at the beginning, and when we were there in September that had passed away and we were told by the commander of one of the airports at Madrid that it was 13 to one in favour of the rebels in the air. Every time a Spanish aeroplane came down—the machines were somewhat old and antiquated—it was a dead loss and could not be replaced, whereas the rebels were being supported by a continuous supply of the latest aeroplanes from Germany and Italy. Senor Prieto, Minister of Marine, said that the policy of the embargo was bringing the Spanish Government fatally to disaster. When I saw these things happening in Madrid, I felt ashamed of seeing the result of the British policy, but I could say, as the Foreign Secretary could not say, in the words of A. E. Housman:
My hand, although my knuckles bleed,
I never shamed with such a deed.
It was at that moment when darkness seemed to be falling over Spain and the hopes of the Spanish Government that two things happened. First of all, there was the arrival in Madrid of the first contingent of the International Brigade, and, secondly, the arrival of a very large supply of arms of every kind, machine guns, field guns, heavy guns, rifles, ammunition and tanks, and, above all, aeroplanes from, I think, Soviet Russia. I was under the impression last December that they all came from Soviet Russia, although I have heard lately that some of them may have come from Mexico or Czechoslovakia. Anyhow, I am content to say that they came from Soviet Russia because M. Maisky the Ambassador, told the Non-Intervention Committee that the Russians intended to keep the non-intervention agreement in exactly the same way as the Italians and Germans were doing. But these arms came, and if it had not been for this breach in the agreement and the help which the Spanish


Government obtained, perhaps the British Government would have been satisfied with the results of their policy, because the Spanish Government might have been defeated and General Franco might have been the victor. It was because it was broken by Russia, after it had been broken by Italy and Germany, that the Spanish Government were saved. There was a change in the situation in December. Mussolini and Hitler being unable to obtain a victory for Franco simply by supplying him with munitions and aeroplanes began to supply him with regular troops. The troops began to arrive in large numbers in Spain in December, and all that the British Government could do was to make exactly the same mistake on the question of volunteers that they made on the question of arms. Without waiting for Italy and Germany to agree they placed a ban on volunteers to Spain from this country and the Foreign Secretary had the meanness to get up in this House and suggest that the brave Englishmen who recently saved the Valencia Road at a cost of half their numbers and who were fighting in a most heroic manner for Spain—he had the meanness to suggest that they were going out with the hope of large monetary rewards or that they had enlisted under the influence of drink. I should not be likely to be of much value myself from the military point of view, but I would much rather be a member of that gallant band fighting for liberty which knows frontiers under the walls of Madrid than be a Foreign Secretary standing up at that Box and uttering cheap sneers at poorer and braver men than himself.
The Foreign Secretary did more than that. concluded what is called a gentleman's agreement with Signor Mussolini, but made no stipulation apparently when the agreement was made regarding the Mediterranean last December that Italy should refrain from sending troops to Spain. It was exactly the same mistake as that made before at the Stresa Conference when another agreement was made with Signor Mussolini and nothing was said to him about Abyssinia. That same mistake was repeated this year in the Mediterranean Agreement, and as no stipulation or suggestion was made that as a result of signing that agreement Italy should stop sending troops to Spain Mussolini naturally considered that he

had carte blanche to send as many troops as he liked. From that time to the present Italian troops have been sent not in single spies nor in battalions but in whole divisions, and it is estimated that there are over 100,000 Italian troops in Spain, and I have even heard it suggested that it is double that number, in addition to 30,000 Germans. That is an estimate that is given by many authorities and the Foreign Secretary to-day, in answer to a question put by me, admitted that he had reports from Gibraltar that Italian troops have landed in Cadiz since the agreement was signed on 20th February.
It appears that there is no longer civil war in Spain at all. What is happening is the invasion of Spain by the Fascist countries. I saw in an American paper that Malaga was captured by a force consisting of 15,000 Italians, 10,000 Germans, 5,000 Moors and 5,000 of the Spanish Foreign Legion, so that it was not captured by a Spanish Army at all. After Malaga was captured an Italian warship came to the quay, in the open light of day and disembarked 1,000 Italian soldiers. No doubt the Spanish people are beginning to feel that like the Abyssinians, they are being deserted by the democratic powers of Europe. In my view this particular Measure and its system of supervision will be a miserable farce. The ban on so-called volunteers was first suggested by the British Government on Christmas Eve. There were interminable delays in the discussions caused by Germany and Italy. Italy eventually agreed to the ban but continued sending in troops. The ban was actually fixed for 20th February, after she had got a huge army into Spain, and it is said now that there are more on the way. The Spanish Government have sent a note alleging that two more Italian divisions are on their way to Spain.
How will this agreement work? Some people seem to think that because fleets from four nations are to encircle the coast of Spain they will be able to stop ships going in with munitions and men. All that they are entitled to do is to observe whether or not they are going in with munitions and men. They have no right to stop them and say: "You shall not go in." Ships can go in loaded with men or guns and all that the British Admiral can do is to report to the International


Board, which in turn will report to the Non-Intervention Committee, which will perhaps discuss it for weeks. Meanwhile, the troops and the munitions will have been landed, they will have gone up to the front and perhaps they will have been responsible for the winning of a victory for the rebels. That is what may well happen under this control by the Fleet. Troops will be able to go in to the assistance of the rebels. If the ships are Italian ships, transferred to General Franco, and flying his flag, they can steam in under the guns of the British Fleet, and there will be no right of inspection or observation so far as their cargoes are concerned. They can steam past our Fleet, as they did at Alexandria, making obscene gestures at the impotent and powerless British Navy.
With regard to the coast held by the Government of Spain, that is to be patrolled by German and Italian warships which have been actually bombarding Spanish towns and taking part in the Civil War in a scarcely veiled way on the side of the rebels. Suppose ships go in with munitions or men presumably for the Spanish Government? The Italian or the German Fleet can stop them and inspect them, and while they are stopped perhaps one of the rebel cruisers, like the "Canarius," with German or Italian gun-layers on board, will come along and either capture or sink the ships, or an Italian or German submarine, disguised as a Spanish war vessel, may come along and do the sinking. Or under the guns of the German or the Italian warships a fleet of Italian transports may come up and disembark an invading army on the coast of Catalonia. The Italians have sent 100,000 men to Spain, and they are not going to allow them to be defeated for lack of munitions or reinforcements. There would be a revolution in Italy if that were allowed. It would be said: "Our men have been sent into the centre of Spain, and under this agreement, although they are short of munitions, no help is to be sent to them." No Italian Government, let alone a Government under Signor Mussolini, would allow such a thing to happen.
This scheme, like the previous scheme, is deliberately designed to handicap the Spanish Government to prevent anything being done, to quieten the public conscience and to damp down any agita-

tion hostile to the Government's policy, until General Franco, Mussolini and Hitler have blotted out Spanish liberty in blood and with poison gas. The scheme is a farce and a sham, brought in in pursuit of a shameful and fraudulent plan, and I ask the House to reject it by a large majority.

10.0 p.m.

Brigadier-General Sir Henry Croft: Having listened to a series of speeches which I can only describe as of a dangerous character, I desire, without, I hope, offending the susceptibilities of any hon. Member, to make my protest. I have had the great privilege of being in this House for 27 years, and I have never heard a Debate which has filled me with so much fear for the future peace of the world than that which has been proceeding this evening. We have had so many speeches and day after day we have so many questions which are reported in the papers of many countries, that I cannot help saying, as one who perhaps has been for a long time with the British Tommy in the front-line trenches, that I beg this House to consider whether we are really pursuing a peaceful policy in the attacks which have been made this evening not on one but on three or four of the great nations of the world.
I know that hon. Members above the Gangway feel very strongly on this question. We had an honest speech from their leading speaker, who said quite definitely that he was out to support the Spanish Government side. There was no doubt about it. He said that he was biased. We have heard again and again in speeches from hon. Members the phrase: "This is what the Spanish people and the Spanish Government are standing for." Let us hold the scales fairly. [HON. MEMBERS: "Hear, hear!"] I am glad that we have had those cheers. I presume it will now be admitted that at least half of Spain is in General Franco's territory. If the people in that territory are not behind General Franco, how is it that he can leave the whole of his line of communication without defence for hundreds of miles.[An HON. MEMBER: "He is supported by Italians."] I thought from what has been stated that "50,000 Italians" were on the Madrid front!
I receive information, not from Spaniards but from the British colony in


Spain. I have been receiving hundreds of letters for the past four months, and I learn that the people behind General Franco are happy and contented and pursuing their usual avocations. When General Franco made his attack on Malaga there may have been many people there who sympathised with the Red forces, but it has to be realised that very large numbers of young Spaniards are training as volunteers for General Franco. They have not been used yet. They have been training for six months. General Franco and his supporters do not persuade their people to go into the line before they are trained. [Interruption.] If I am giving offence I am very sorry, but I want hon. Members to realise that a large number of people in this country have seen their fellow Christians butchered in vast numbers in the first days of the revolution. There may have been cruelties on both sides, that may be true, but are we going to help things by making enemies of half of the Spanish people?
Surely the policy of His Majesty's Government in trying to be absolutely independent is right. Surely we ought to do what we can to assist His Majesty's Government to work with other democratic Governments to localise the conflict. An hon. Member has told us of a Spaniard whose motor car was bombarded by a German submarine. How could he know that it was a German submarine? I do not think we should take for granted all the reports which come over the wireless. We must try to keep calm. After all, it is a pretty big combination which hon. Members opposite have been attacking this afternoon—Germany, Italy, Japan, and Portugal. Ought we not to try to set an example to the whole world to preserve peace? Hon. Members opposite will agree that no Italians or Germans could have taken part in the conflict but for the fact that they had the active leave of their Governments. But is it not the case that there were thousands of French volunteers passing day after day through the railways into Spain, that Britons who were also serving with General Franco came hack saying how these men were streaming through day after day? It stands to reason that Italy and Germany would do something to alter the balance.
Do not let us throw stones. This is a tragic happening, and it is an explosive

situation. We do not want to add fuel to the flames. We do not want to attack anyone with all the adjectives that have been used in the course of the Debate, and with accusations of double dealing and how these foreign Powers, after they have come into this agreement, will for certain start bombarding the coasts. Do not let us make any mistake, the peoples of Germany and Italy are behind their Governments, and if these attacks are made on the leaders of these countries you are going to inflict an injury which they will not forget. I hope the House will do what it can to help His Majesty's Government to strengthen the Bill if there are weaknesses, but at the same time we must do our utmost to show that if the world is mad we at least are trying to keep sane.

10.10 p.m.

Mr. Grenfell: The hon. and gallant Member who has urged that we should not offend half the people of Spain does not mind if he offends the other half. I would ask the hon. and gallant Member not to allow himself to be influenced solely by class feeling. There is a much bigger thing involved than that. I have been to Spain, and I have seen the attacks on the Spanish people. I am filled with sympathy for them in their plight. I have not the slightest bit of hatred towards anybody in Spain. The Debate this afternoon has certainly disclosed strong feelings on the part of all hon. Members; and that is not to be wondered at. I have listened with as much calmness as I can to the Debate, and the impression it has made upon me is that we should try to realise the situation in Spain. We are not concerned with a piece of domestic legislation but with a piece of business affecting in the long run the lives of our own people. We are, in fact, intervening. This is intervention by legislative means, calling upon the people to translate into legislation what we think should be done in the supposed interests of the Spanish people. This is intervention, but it would be wrong to assume that only military intervention has taken place.
For the last three years there has been political propaganda of a very intense nature in Spain. Hon. Members opposite will mislead themselves if they assume that it was political propaganda by the Russian Bolshevik party. Spain was


honeycombed with Nazi propaganda a long time before the actual military clash took place, long before the two sides had actually taken up their lines and long before there appeared the military material and personnel sent by the Italian Government to take part in the struggle. From the beeginning this has not been a civil war. It has been an invasion of Spain in the interests of those countries who are now carrying on the task of helping General Franco. Intervention began in a small way when a number of people went in July, August and September as volunteers filled with enthusiasm for the cause of liberty. Some went as volunteers by land from France and England, and some went overseas by air from Germany and Italy, but it must be remembered that in the former instance this was intervention by the individual who was prepared to make his sacrifice. Government intervention has been confined to the Governments of Italy, Germany and Portugal.
We have been told that we must not offend Italy, Germany and Portugal, but it is no use being mealy-mouthed about this. The legislation before the House is necessary only because we are not able to trust the pledged word of certain countries, and because intervention has been found to he a fact. I believed last July and August that non-intervention was a sound policy, but when intervention under government auspices began to take place and governments permitted intervention for their own advantage, it would have been just as well if non-intervention had become the policy of all the nations in Europe. I believe that eventually nonintervention would have secured peace.
There has never been a scheme of nonintervention. After nine months of waiting, this is our first opportunity of discussing a plan for securing non-intervention. Hitherto we have relied on the good word of various Governments, we have kept up the pretence of the Non-Intervention Committee and of trusting one another; but it was all a farce. It was a great offence to this House to lead it to believe that there was a bona fide attempt by the 27 nations to carry out the pledge which they signed in August last not to intervene in Spain. I do not believe a single nation has carried out that pledge quite properly, although I believe this country has been closest to

perfection in that respect. Non-intervention has never been a fact, and there has been intervention by almost every one of the signatories.
If there had not been violations of the agreement, which were partly in the interests of the Spanish Government, that Government would have ceased to function long ago. Happily it exists, it has not ceased to function, and it has carried out its responsibilities to the Spanish people and its responsibilities abroad to this day. It is the de facto Government of Spain and there is no reason for not recognising that. From the beginning we have claimed, as I have no doubt many hon. Members opposite also have felt, that a Government elected as recently as the Spanish Government had been had the unqualified right to arm itself in order to be able to assert its authority.
Hon. Members opposite ought to try to get rid of the idea—as one or two have done this evening—that because only a small majority of the Spanish people was in favour of the Government, it was not the elected Government. Very often in this country we have been governed by a Government which represented a minority of the electorate. The Spanish Government had a perfect right to go into the markets of the world to secure a sufficient supply of arms with which to defend its interests against those people who disagreed with it and revolted. But no Government should be expected to have to defend itself against foreign invaders interfering in quarrels on its own soil. There can be no justification in any circumstances for the appearance of German and Italian troops in Spain. No hon. Member should ever think of attempting to justify that.
Time after time evasive replies on this matter have been made by the Noble Lord the Under-Secretary of State. Probably he made those evasive replies in the interests of diplomacy, but I do not believe that evasions and concealments pay in the long run. It would have been much better if we had taken official notice of the breaches of the non-intervention pact, to which I believe this country and France were committed in good faith. We ought to have taken official note of those breaches long ago. Now we have come to the point that there is in Spain an expeditionary force almost as large as that


which was sent from this country to the Continent in 1914. There can be no doubt at all about the fact that there is a substantial body of trained Italian troops in Spain. I am consoling myself with the view that the Italians have sent so many people to Spain that they may yet regret it. I believe it possible that the Italians who are already in Spain may refuse to fight. There is no good reason why they should fight. They are deluded victims who were brought to Spain under the pretence that they were going to Abyssinia or somewhere else. I have spoken to some of them and from what I have heard I think that the Italian people when they find how they have been tricked may revolt, and that that revolt may begin on the soil of Spain. Should that take place it will be the signal for very serious consequences to the internal security of Italy itself.
I beg the House not to assume that intervention is a new thing which is going to be dealt with by this Bill. This is a miserable Bill which has no substance at all, no authority behind it and no penalties within it. It provides for nothing but the sending of a few retired naval officers on joy trips with notebooks, to take note of what they see on vessels going from English ports or any of these other ports, to Spanish ports. These men are expected to look round on these ships, to see what kind of packages are in the holds, to watch the goods when they are being discharged and to report on what they see being discharged. Then their duties are finished. There is no real authority anywhere, and no power even to stop the discharge of military material. They have only the power to make notes and to submit a report in a very round-about way to somebody higher up, who, again has no authority, but considers the matter and reports, in turn, to somebody who is further up still. The Bill only carries on a pretence which has cost Spain a great deal already, and is involving Europe deeper and deeper in the possibilities of a conflict from which we shall find no escape unless we take some more definite step than this.
German and Italian aggression is becoming more and more open. It is not confined to the fighting fronts in Spain. Spanish Morocco is now occupied.

I do not think that can be denied. The last explanation I saw of the position there was that certain light guns had been mounted under the direction of German experts. If the German experts are there, I believe that Germans will be using those guns should the opportunity arise. The House will be adopting a ve
ry dangerous course if they accept the view that this Bill is going to do anything to bring the Germans and Italians out of Spain. Does anybody believe that if the Germans and the Italians have deemed it worth while to send 100,000 men there, with a large amount of material and many tanks and guns, they are simply going to go away when this little row is over and forget that they ever had anything to do with Spain? No, they are in Spain staking their claim, and probably the price has been determined beforehand. Germany and Italy are not going to go empty-handed from this adventure. General Franco knows quite well that he cannot win without their assistance, and with that knowledge he is relying more and more, in the prosecution of this military adventure, on the assistance given by Germany and Italy. The Bill does nothing to stop it, and I would like this House to consider quite a different kind of proposal.
I do not know whether I should be in order on the Second Reading of a Bill to suggest that what the House should be doing would be to devise means, and to express, in terms agreed on all sides of this House, our determination that we shall not look with favour upon, that we shall be no party in any way to, the invasion of Spain which we are witnessing. It is in the interests of Spain, of humanity, of European peace, of justice, and certainly in British interests, that this thing should be stopped. It would be very nice if we on this side of the House were to be left to teach the British Imperialists where their interest lies, and no one can deny that there is a very great danger to British interests. Germany and Italy are already intervening in Spain, and they will not give up their intervention because of the fear of anything in this Bill. They will, therefore, continue, and I would much prefer that a statement should be made in this House to-night that we think the time has come for a genuine non-intervention, for the ending of all intervention on the part of


these Governments, and for the institution of an immediate plan to that end. Anybody could fashion that plan. I believe that I could fashion it.
I believe that any serious, sincere man, any man keen on securing peace in Europe, could devise means by which you could withdraw the volunteers on both sides in Spain. They are not difficult to find. I saw the volunteers on the Government side, and the House may be surprised to know that there were no more than 2,500 of them on the Madrid front when I was there in November—a small body. I, who am not a soldier, honour them very much for the tremendous gallantry which they displayed in the face of abnormal odds, defending Madrid day in and day out, days on end, in inclement weather and under very hard circumstances—Englishmen, Germans, Frenchmen, and Italians. I honour and respect them very much indeed, but I feel sure that it would be better in the interests of Spain if they were removed from Spain. I believe that the Spanish people can settle this quarrel by themselves. After all, they have to live with each other again. When an hon. Member opposite said that we must not do anything to endanger our own relations with the people of Spain, can we, by allowing intervention, hope to make peace with the people of Spain, who are to be butchered and exterminated by the armies of these interventionists? I do not think you can get peace in Spain on those terms.
I feel sure that General Franco will never rule the people in Spain. I am convinced that there will be so much resentment against the mode of his attempt to capture power that the people of Spain will never forget it. If we can get nonintervention and withdraw the people who are now fighting in Spain, on our side, and give assistance to the Spanish people to settle their own affairs, I think we can assist in those later conditions which we may hope to bring about. In those conditions I think we ought to be able to help the Spanish people.

Captain Dower: When the hon. Member was in Spain, did he see any Russians there? Were there any Russians there?

Mr. Grenfell: I made particularly close inquiries on that point, and I want the

House to believe me when I say that I was just as anxious to find out the truth about that matter as anybody in this House. I never, and my colleagues with me, turned away from anything because I found that it did not suit my book. We went right through them and looked for everything. We interviewed the head of the International Brigade in Madrid, who gave us details and figures of Germans, French, Italians, Czechs, Poles, English, and Belgians. We had the figures of all the nationalities which composed the international column and brigade, and there was no reason why we should be deceived. We went to the fighting fronts and saw the people there. I happen to know Russian when it is spoken, and I did not hear one word of Russian spoken among the companies of the international brigade whom we met night after night. I heard German, French, Italian, and English spoken, but never a word of Russian. I assure the House there were no Russians fighting on the Madrid front in November and December last. It is said that there are Russian aeroplanes. I saw some aeroplanes which I believed to be Russian. I was told they were flown by Russian aviators, but that the number was not large. I was told that on the authority of an English flyer who was flying for the Spanish Government, and he knew the details in regard to aviation in Madrid. I do not think that any Russians have been seen, unless they have been such Russians as those which went from Aberdeen to London in 1914. I am sure there are no Russian soldiers in Spain. I am sure that the trouble in Spain is not due to intervention by Russia. If I may express my personal view, it is that it is much more due to intervention from Germany in the form of insidious propaganda long before the revolution started.
I would like the House to take a much more definite attitude towards this question of non-intervention. We have assumed a form of responsibility for it, but let us take a much more real responsibility, a responsibility affecting our influence and prestige in the world. I am sure we shall help Spain if we come out definitely on the side of non-intervention and of the withdrawal of those people who have gone to Spain with aggression in their mind and who are committing acts of aggression every day. I was led by curiosity to-day to look up the De-


bates in this House nearly 100 years ago, and there I found the words of a well known statesman, Lord Palmerston. Speaking in the House on 19th April, 1837, he used these words:
The opinion which this House will to-night pronounce will decide not simply between conflicting parties in England, but between antagonistic principles struggling for ascendancy in the other countries of Europe, and on that decision may depend the peace, the welfare and the happiness of nations.
I ask the House to take a real responsibility in this matter, and I am sure it will be a much more effective piece of legislation than that which is offered to the House in this Bill.

10.33 p.m.

The President of the Board of Trade (Mr. Runciman): The Debate to-day has not followed the usual Rules of our Procedure, for in every part of the House there has been more freedom from the technical restrictions of debate than usual. The speech of my hon. Friend the Member for Gower (Mr. Grenfell) was one devoted mainly to the general lines of policy as expressed by our actions in Spain and with regard to Spain, whereas the Motion before the House is the Second Reading of a Bill which does no! of itself express any opinion on general policy, but is the mere machine by which that policy is to be executed. I make no complaint of the wide range of the Debate, but I should like before I come to the larger topics which have attracted our attention so profoundly—and, may I say, in some respects so painfully?—to get the technical problems out of the way.
I was asked by my hon. and gallant Friend the Member for West Birkenhead (Lieut.-Colonel Sandeman Allen) a question with regard to the "Springwear," which was arrested outside Gibraltar. The "Spring-wear" appears to have fled from an armed trawler belonging to the insurgents. She made her way to Gibraltar and there, under the Act passed last year, the Carriage of Munitions to Spain Act, the authorities proceeded to examine her cargo. I do not think my hon. and gallant Friend knew what had been the result of that examination. We have today received a telegram to say that the whole of her grain cargo had been discharged, and that there are no munitions of war and no arms anywhere in her hold, so that she has now a clean sheet. I

cannot say what arrangements have definitely been made on the spot, but I presume that her cargo will now be reloaded. In a case of that kind it is obvious that it would be wrong to place the whole burden of the loss of, probably, a fortnight of the ship's time and any consequences of deviation, on the shipowner's shoulders. Neither the shipowner nor the master of the ship is in any way blameworthy, and I hope that when consideration of that case comes on it will be one of the cases dealt with under the financial provisions which are being made.

Mr. Noel-Baker: And will that ship receive protection in delivering its cargo to where it was consigned?

Mr. Runciman: I should not like to say that.

Mr. Noel-Baker: Under the Bill passed last December?

Mr. Runciman: I express no opinion as to the course that ought to be taken by the authorities. I am only giving my hon. and gallant Friend the information for which he asked, and the latest information is that the ship has been found to be entirely free from anything in the way of arms. If she is carrying food to other countries there may be other reasons for her not going on there, but they will not arise out of her cargo or the kind of traffic in which it has been engaged. I was also asked by him whether vessels which were taken to a port or went in for observation purposes would have to pay port dues. The two ports with which we are mainly concerned are Dover and Gibraltar, and in neither case will the dues be a very serious matter, but it is just as well to say that if dues are to be paid in respect of these observation calls, they must of course be a charge upon the non-intervention fund. They ought not to be a burden on the shipowner because of the ramifications of our national policy. He also wished to know on what grounds the observing officers were to be carried—whether on the same conditions in regard to life and property as passengers in ships. I think that is the least we can do for these men who have to discharge these extraordinarily disagreeable duties. One of the very few things on which I differed profoundly from my hon. Friend opposite was a remark he made with regard to the observation officers being on "joy


rides." I cannot think that he imagines that going backwards and forwards across the Bay of Biscay at this time of the year is a joy ride, and I think he must realise the wisdom of the Board in selecting for this service, when the time comes, some of the old salts who are really hardened to that kind of joy ride.

Lieut.-Colonel Sandeman Allen: If there is a claim on the shipowner for such a liability, will the shipowner have to pay or will the fund meet that claim?

Mr. Runciman: In the first place it will be paid by the ship, and then the ship will have the right to collect from an insurance fund. I will deal with another point raised by my hon. and gallant Friend. I hope the House will forgive me for dealing with so many points in his speech, but really his was the only speech which was strictly in order.

Mr. McGovern: I was suspended for a statement like that.

Mr. Bevan: On a point of Order. I suggest that the observation of the right hon. Gentleman just now was a reflection upon the Chair. The Debate this evening has been permitted by the Chair.

Mr. Speaker: I have found that generosity does not always get its reward.

Mr. Runciman: I make the fullest possible acknowledgment of the generosity. May I now deal with the last point raised by my hon. and gallant Friend. It was with regard to diversion of ships. If he will turn to paragraph 20 of the White Paper on page 12 he will note under (a) that provision is to be made for a limit of four hours. It is only a small amount and will not be very serious, but it does deal justly with those who otherwise might be aggrieved because they were complying with the law of the land. May I now come to that part of the subject which has excited our interest from the beginning to the end of this Debate? Non-intervention is obviously the best line of policy that we could pursue.

Miss Wilkinson: May I ask whether the right hon. Gentleman is leaving technicalities now, because I was promised a reply on my question about change of flag?

Mr. Runciman: I did not know that the hon. Lady had raised that question. I must have been out of the House at the time. There is no reason why there should not be purchase and sale of ships. We cannot prevent that. I think that covers the case which she had in mind. May I now come to the main question? I listened with the very greatest care to the speeches made by those Members of the House who went to Spain to obtain information first hand. I respect their assiduity and their courage, but I would point out how extraordinarily difficult it is for several individuals to obtain an impression of a whole country. We know that sort of thing happens again and again in our own country and abroad. It is a very common experience. I hope, therefore, that we shall not attach overdue authority to the travellers who, in all good faith, and with very great perseverance and at the cost of their comfort and even of their health, did their best to find out. Whatever they found out is, I am sure, no better than the worst. Everything one hears of the conduct of the war in Spain makes one feel more and more disappointed that, in this stage of our civilisation, there should be going on in Europe the kind of atrocity on both sides that really is deplorable. I have no desire whatever to be associated with either one side or the other.
I personally hold the very same principles that are embodied in the scheme which has been under discussion in the Bill now before the House. I believe that non-intervention is the only course that we can properly take. I do so for this reason: Collective authority is, after all, a principle which is supported on both sides of the House. There is no monopoly of enthusiasm for collective authority. The hon. Member for Derby (Mr. Noel-Baker) made a very strong and passionate appeal for support of collective action in some form or another, but he finds the Bill unsatisfactory. Yet he himself is pledged to the general policy which is embodied in this document. On 2nd March, he said:
The principal fact is that at long last some system of control over the so-called nonintervention agreement is we hope, about to be introduced."—[OFFICIAL REPORT, 2nd March, '937; col. 304, Vol. 321.]
It is that same degree and system of control which we are wishing to pass through


the House to-night. I am sure that the hon. Gentleman does not wish to depart from his desire of 2nd March.

Mr. Noel-Baker: I did make a special appeal to the Government on that day—if the right hon. Gentleman will read a bit further—to make the system of control which they proposed really effective. We, unhappily, regard this Bill as extremely ineffective, particularly after what the right hon. Gentleman has said about the question of transfer of flags, which really knocks the bottom out of the whole thing.

Mr. Runciman: Transfer of flag is not such a simple thing as all that. I would point out to the hon. Gentleman that, if non-intervention is really the policy that he would support, what divides us at the present time is the means we adopt in order to reach non-intervention effectively. Let me remind the House of what we have done. I think it was as long ago as last autumn that we were pressed strongly by the present Prime Minister of France to support his non-intervention policy. We fell in with his desire, and have done our best to play our part in the creation of machinery by which non-intervention should become effective; and the scheme, whatever may be said about its ramifications, is a perfectly genuine attempt to frame machinery by which non-intervention can be supervised, observed and laid bare for public criticism. One of the great troubles that we have had all along is not only that we cannot get information covering the whole country completely, but we have found it extraordinarily difficult to obtain the necessary amount of accurate information with regard to the supply of arms and other munitions of war. This Measure goes a very long way towards laying bare the facts as they may be ascertained, and it covers such a wide area that I venture to prophesy that very little will get through the sieve.
The object we had in view was to attempt, so far as we could, to obtain international support, to draw with us the most influential Powers of the world; and it is no inconsiderable achievement to have got 27 of them to come to the same conference and to bind themselves to the same conditions. It may be very easy to sneer at them, and say that they will not keep their word, but in international agreements you must take for

granted the honesty of the men with whom you are dealing. To adopt the Line of distrusting this man or the other man, or of not regarding international agreements with respect, is, I venture to say, a wrong way to proceed either to bring about collective authority or to maintain the peace of the world.
If the hon. Gentleman and his friends are really in favour of non-intervention, I think we can go a considerable way in agreement with them. I am not anxious to emphasise or exaggerate points on which we differ, but let us see on what points we are agreed. We are agreed that we do not wish to enter into this war on either the one side or the other. However strong feeling may be in favour of one side or the other, there is no considerable body of opinion in this country that would tolerate our going to war. That is one of the points on which we are agreed. Secondly, I am sure we are agreed that international agreements provide us with the only alternative, either to no agreement at all, which may lead to friction, or to a dangerous situation out of which war may spread.
I feel certain that hon. Gentlemen opposite, just as much as those who sit in other parts of the House, will agree that we are putting our Navy to good use in exercising a remarkable degree of naval vigilance. Those dangerous waters are being patrolled, thank God, by British ships. I only wish we had more of them to do it. The drawback from which we are suffering at the present time is that we have scarcely enough to go round. But I believe it will be agreed in every quarter of the House that that is the right way in which to proceed. We can operate our own ships with a greater sense of security than we can get through agreements outside. We know exactly what is happening. They have to obey orders which are issued from this side; they must conduct their several occasions in exactly the same way if they were within 20 miles of Whitehall, or 2,000.

Vice-Admiral Taylor: May I ask the right hon. Gentleman what power His Majesty's ships have to compel a ship to stop? It is easy to hoist false colours, or to alter the name of a ship at sea, and, if that ship will not stop, but intends to go through with a cargo of arms or whatever it may be, what power have His Majesty's ships to compel that ship to stop?

Mr. Runciman: If my hon. and gallant Friend will cast his memory back to last year, he will remember that we passed an Act which does provide that British ships may be subject to arrest, and we obtained statutory power for taking that action.

Vice-Admiral Taylor: I have in view a foreign ship which hoists the British colour, paints out its name and paints in the name of a British ship with the deliberate intention of going through the patrol. What power is there to stop that ship?

Mr. Runciman: The hon. and gallant Member may have had occasion to order the hauling down of a flag. If a vessel does fly a wrong flag and attempts to disguise herself under the British flag she is liable to arrest under the Merchant Shipping Acts. He wants to go further, and says that why should we not do something to arrest foreign ships? Unless a ship breaks some of our domestic laws it is impossible to arrest a foreign ship, unless there is a blockade. On the whole we had better restrict our vigilance to the duties which have been described to-night, and not extend them as the hon. and gallant Member suggests.
The last two points on which we are agreed are these. I presume that both sides of the House realise that it is only by co-operative action, covering the largest possible number of people, that we can secure anything likely to be effective and permanent in the present conditions. I believe that the whole House is agreed that it is not right that these duties should fall on us alone. What is to be deduced from these various points of agreement? Surely this, that we must act together in so far as we can draw the nations together into one room, sign one document, and carry through one code; that to do that is far better than attempting to act alone, which cannot be effective and must inevitably be dangerous. The machinery has been devised to give a sense of fair play, and I would like to draw attention to the fact that two of the chief administrative officers will be Admiral Van Dulm, who is to be chairman of the board and Rear-Admiral Olivier who is to be chief administrator. Colonel Lunn is to be chief administrator in France. You will have at the head of this organisation men whose integrity

we can rely on. There will be no partiality shown by them, and I am certain that when it comes to the appointment of observation officers there will be none of the irregular proceedings which have been suggested in some parts of the House. The chairman of the board and the chief administrator are both Dutchmen.
Having reached the stage where our objects are the same, what happens over the methods by which they are to be attained? They have been condemned in some quarters as inadequate, and the hon. Member who has just spoken did all he could to belittle the efforts expressed in this Bill. I can only say that this Bill embodies the findings of the authors of the scheme, that 27 peoples have given their names to it, and I am bound to believe that they did so in good faith. Unless we are to accept their good faith I do not know where we shall stand in the future. Of the 27 peoples involved in this undertaking, seven might be regarded as of first-class importance. We should be delighted to welcome any others who care to enter into the same bonds. We have not only used them, and intend to continue to use them, but we rely upon the assistance which comes from all independent opinion and from some of those who are themselves not given to entering into international obligations in Europe. I say nothing about what may be done by the trans-Atlantic Powers, but it is certain that sooner or later their attention will be so closely concentrated upon affairs in Europe that they will be expressing a view. When they do express a view, do not let us start off by describing to them a condition of things which is really far from the truth, namely, that you cannot trust those with whom you enter into international obligations in Europe. I am prepared to take in good faith any great Power which attaches its name to these international instruments.

Mr. Noel-Baker: Why are we setting up a patrol if it is not for the reason that they have shown that they cannot be trusted?

Mr. Runciman: I should not express it as crudely as that. We are setting up a patrol because we want the whole of the facts made known to the civilised world in the belief that that knowledge will do more to foster a peaceful atmosphere than almost anything else that we can


undertake. I believe this war in Spain is likely to become a war of exhaustion, and in that dreadful process the suffering and loss of life will be almost incalculable. It, is for that reason that I regard this Debate as being one of really grave importance. I think we can make one contribution, at all events, toward international action, which appears to me to be the only way out, and that is to give authority to the executive Government to carry through the policy that is embodied in this scheme.

10.57 p.m.

Mr. Gallacher: I want to draw attention to the fact that democracy is being tested in the struggle that is going on in Spain. It is the first occasion on which democracy has made a real stand against aggression, and that is important not only for the people of Spain but for the Members of this House and for the people of this country. The hon. Member for Penryn and Falmouth (Mr. Pethrick) repeated to-night what has been said so often. "We want to isolate the conflict." In Manchuria our desire was to isolate the conflict, and when aggression was allowed to ruin Manchuria it brought about, as a natural consequence, aggression very much nearer, in Abyssinia. Then our whole desire was to isolate the conflict in Abyssinia. Once again aggression triumphed. Then it came from Abyssinia to Europe, and so Fascist aggression will go on if it is tolerated until this world lies in ruins, and out of the ruins will come our immaculate but hopelessly ineffective Foreign Secretary and he will address the other planets and inform them that we have isolated the conflict.
I have listened to-night to arguments of such an extraordinary character that they show their shallow support for democracy and their real support for Fascism. Why should anyone come to us and say that we must trust the word of the representatives of these other nations, when the representatives of those nations have not only deliberately and ruthlessly broken treaties, but have stated time after time that they are prepared to break their word at any time or to make promises in order to deceive? This sort of thing has been expressed on different occasions, but the speech that was the most remarkable was that of the Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs. I do not know whether the Government put him up with

any serious intentions or not, but, at any rate, it seems to be a very pitiful commentary on the intelligence of the Government when we get such a representative making such arguments as he made on this occasion. He told us that they strongly suspected that Arabs were going into Spain.
I would direct the attention of the House to the fact that Franco has half of the Spanish territory, but he has not half of the Spanish people in that territory. He has territory which is essentially sparsely populated and largely agricultural, but the great industrial centre of Spain is Barcelona. The great munitions factories are in Barcelona. Will any representative of the Government who suspects that arms are going into the country tell us where Franco's arms are being manufactured, if not in Italy and Germany? There is no other place for them. There are arms coming all the time from Barcelona. The great factories are working day and night producing guns and aeroplanes, but where are Franco's factories? They are in Germany and Italy. This is something to which sufficient attention has not been given.
The Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs comes here and suggests that you see half-a-dozen Italians in one place, and that when you go to other places you see the same half-dozen, as if Franco was keeping half-a-dozen Italians to parade round his particular part of the country in order to create the impression that he has a lot of Italians on the job. This is the sort of argument we get from the Front Bench. The Italians and the Germans have an army there. That is clear, and nobody with any reputation to lose would dare to dispute that fact. The hon. Member who spoke from the Front Bench started off by exhorting the Members of the House not to listen to stories. The Noble Lady who spoke from the benches opposite said something about someone who had seen a German submarine. Do not listen to these stories, he said, and then he ended his speech in the most impassioned language by saying what were Italy and Germany to do when people whom he know, who were over in France, saw train load after train load of Frenchmen. His advice is that we should not listen to any stories against Franco, but that we, should listen to any amount of stories against the other


side. If an hon. Member on the Government side puts a question, he has an inquiring mind, but if anyone from these benches puts a question he has a suspicious mind.
The important thing that has emerged from to-night's Debate is that there are Britishers in the International Brigade but they have not been sent by the British Government or are not paid for by the British Government. There are Frenchmen in the International Brigade, who have not been sent by and are not paid for by the French Government. There are Germans in the International Brigade not sent by or paid for by the German Government. [HON. MEMBERS: "Who pays for them?") But no one will deny that the Germans and the Italians who are on Franco's side are regular trained soldiers sent by the German and Italian Governments and paid for and maintained by those Governments.
There are many volunteers who have gone out to Spain and who have endured the greatest hardships in order to go there. Some of them have stowed away in trains and have slept by the hedge-side. They are young men who have volunteered because they believe in democracy. I wish hon. Members opposite believed in democracy as these young men do. Hon. Members opposite asked who pays for the International Brigade. There has been a campaign in this country organised by various people appealing for funds in order to help in the maintenance of the brigade. Hundreds of letters come in containing contributions large and small. I have seen letters with 10s. notes, £5 notes and cheques for £5 and £10, and so on. There was a meeting in the Albert Hall for medical aid for Spain, and £2,000 was taken in the collection. From every part of the country, towns and villages, help is forthcoming. In my own county of Fife, in mining villages, you can get a meeting and have a collection of £30 in aid of the International Brigade. That is where the money is coming from.

Mr. Henderson Stewart: Not from East Fife?

Mr. Gallacher: Yes. From such places as Buckhaven and St. Andrews. I was at St. Andrews the other night at the University, and I got a very good reception when pleading the cause of Spain. These young men who have volunteered have gone out because they believe in democracy, not for any fee or reward, and not because they have been deceived by anybody. The British battalion in the International Brigade has given service to the cause of democracy which is one of the finest episodes in the history of the working-class and progressive movement in this country. It is a record of which we ought to be proud.
I join with the hon. Member for Broxtowe (Mr. Cocks) in his remarks about the Foreign Secretary. How can the Foreign Secretary, talking about men who are in the trenches facing all the mechanised weapons of Germany and Italy with inadequate arms, heroically fighting, say that he has received a letter from someone in Paris, who apparently wanted to have his fare back home saying that somebody persuaded him when he was drunk to go to Spain? That is the story. He was drunk when he was in London, drunk when he got to Dover! What a story!

Mr. Speaker: The hon. Member is now getting far away from the Bill.

Mr. Gallacher: I accept your Ruling. I want to say that this House, representing, as it claims, the centre and stronghold of democracy, should gladly pay its tribute to these young men who have sacrificed their lives in the fight for democracy. I and my hon. Friends, at any rate, will pay this tribute and do our utmost to see that the cause for which they have died shall triumph and that the reactionaries, the Fascists, shall find their grave in Spain.

Question put, "That the word 'now' stand part of the Question."

The House divided: Ayes, 192; Noes, 86.

Division No. 114.]
AYES.
[11.12 p.m.


Acland, Rt. Hon. Sir F. Dyke
Aske, Sir R. W.
Briscoe, Capt. R. G.


Acland-Troyte, Lt.-Col, G. J.
Attor, Hon. W. W. (Falham, E.)
Brocklebank, C. E. R.


Agnaw, Lieut.-Comdr, P. G.
Atholl, Duchess of
Browne, A. C. (Belfast, W.)


Albery, Sir Irving
Balfour, Capt. H. H. (Isle of Thanet)
Bull, B. B.


Allen, Lt.-Col. J. Sandeman (B'kn'hd)
Bernays, R. H.
Burgin, Dr. E. L.


Anderson, Sir A. Garrett (C. of Ldn.)
Birchall, Sir J. D.
Butler, R. A.


Anstruther-Gray, W. J.
Boulton, W. W.
Campbell, Sir E. T.


Apsley, Lord
Bowyer, Capt. Sir G. E. W.
Carver, Major W. H.




Cary, R. A.
Holdsworth, H.
Ponsonby, Col. C. E.


Castlereagh, Viscount
Holmes, J. S.
Procter, Major H. A.


Cayzer, Sir C. W. (City of Chester)
Hope, Captain Hon. A. O. J.
Radford, E. A.


Cazalet, Thelma (Islington, E.)
Hopkinson, A.
Ramsbotham, H.


Cazalat, Capt. V. A. (Chippenham)
Howitt, Dr. A. B.
Ramsden, Sir E.


Channon, H.
Hudson, Capt. A. U. M. (Hack., N.)
Rathbone, Eleanor (English Univ's.)


Clarke, Lt.-Col. R. S. (E. Grinstead)
Hulbert, N. J.
Rathbone, J. R. (Bodmin)


Colman, N. C. D.
Hume, Sir G. H.
Rayner, Major R. H.


Colville, Lt.-Col. Rt. Hon. D. J.
Hunter, T.
Reed, A. C. (Exeter)


Cook, Sir T. R. A. M. (Norfolk, N.)
James, Wing-Commander A. W. H.
Reid, Sir D. D. (Down)


Cooke, J. D. (Hammersmith, S.)
Jones, H. Haydn (Merioneth)
Raid, W. Allan (Derby)


Cooper, Rt. Hn. A. Duff (W'st'r S. G'gs)
Jones, L. (Swansea W.)
Rickards, G. W. (Skipton)


Cooper, Rt. Hn. T. M. (E'nburgh, W.)
Keeling, E. H.
Robinson, J. R. (Blackpool)


Cranborne, Viscount
Kerr, H. W. (Oldham)
Ross Taylor, W. (Woodbridge)


Craven-Ellis, W.
Kerr, J. Graham (Scottish Univs.)
Rothschild, J. A. de


Croft, Brig.-Gen. Sir H. Page
Kimball, L.
Rowlands, G.


Crooke, J. S.
Lamb, Sir J. Q.
Ruggles-Brise, Colonel Sir E. A.


Crookshank, Capt. H. F. C.
Latham, Sir P.
Runciman, Rt. Hon. W.


Croom-Johnton, R. P.
Lackie, J. A.
Russell, A. West (Tynemouth)


Cross, R. H.
Leech, Dr. J. W.
Russell, R. J. (Eddisbury)


Crossley, A. C.
Lees-Jones, J.
Russell, S. H. M. (Darwen)


Crowder, J. F. E.
Leighton, Major B. E. P.
Salmon, Sir I.


Cruddas, Col. B.
Lennox-Boyd, A. T. L.
Sassoon, Rt. Hon. Sir P.


Culverwell, C. T.
Liddall, W. S.
Shakespeare, G. H


Davies, C. (Montgomery)
Lloyd, G. W.
Simon, Rt. Hon. Sir J. A.


Davies, Major Sir G. F. (Yeovil)
Loftus, P. C.
Smiles, Lieut.-Colonel Sir W. D.


Denman, Hon. R. D.
Lovat-Fraser, J. A.
Smith, L. W. (Hallam)


Doland, G. F.
Lyons, A. M.
Somervell, Sir D. B. (Crewe)


Dorman-Smith, Major R. H.
McCorquodale, M. S.
Somerville, A. A. (Windsor)


Dower, Capt. A. V. G.
MacDonald, Sir Murdoch (Inverness)
Southby, Commander A. R. J.


Duckworth, W. R. (Moss Side)
McEwen, Capt. J. H. F.
Stanley, Rt. Hon. Lord (Fylde)


Duncan J. A. L.
McKie, J. H.



Eastwood, J. F.
Maclay, Hon. J. P.
Stewart, J. Henderson (Fife, E.)


Ellis, Sir G.
Makins, Brig.-Gen. E.
Strauss, E. A. (Southwark, N.)


Elliston, Capt. G. S.
Manningham-Buller, Sir M.
Sueter, Rear-Admiral Sir M. F.


Emery, J. F.
Margesson, Capt. Rt. Hon. H. D. R.
Sutcliffe, H.


Emrys-Evans, P. V.
Markham, S. F.
Tate, Mavis C.


Errington, E.
Maxwell, Hon. S. A.
Taylor, Vice-Adm. E. A. (Padd., S.)


Evans, D. O. (Cardigan)
Mayhew, Lt.-Col. J.
Thomson, Sir J. D. W.


Everard, W. L.
Meller, Sir R. J. (Mitcham)
Touche, G. C.


Fildes, Sir H.
Mellor, Sir J. S. P. (Tamworth)
Tree, A. R. L. F.


Foot, D. M.
Mitchell, H. (Brentford and Chiswick)
Tufnell, Lieut.-Commander R. L.


Fox, Sir G. W. G.
Morris-Jones, Sir Henry
Turton, R. H.


Fremantle, Sir F. E.
Morrison, Rt. Hon. W. S. (Cirencester)
Wakefield, W. W.


Furness, S. N.
Munro, P.
Wallace, Capt. Rt. Hon. Euan


Ganzoni, Sir J.
Novan-Spenee, Major B. H. H.
Ward, Lieut.-Col. Sir A. L. (Hull)


Gibson, C. G. (Pudsey and Otfey)
O'Connor, Sir Terence J.
Ward, Irene M. B. (Wallsend)


Gluckstein, L. H.
O'Neill, Major Rt. Hon. Sir Hugh
Waterhouse, Captain C.


Grant-Ferris, R.
Ormsby-Gore, Rt. Hon. W. G. A.
Wickham, Lt.-Col. E. T. R.


Griffith, F. Kingsley (M'ddl'sbro, W.)
Orr-Ewing, I. L.
Windsor-Clive, Lieut.-Colonel G.


Guest, Hon. I. (Brecon and Radnor)
Palmer, G. E. H.
Winterton, Rt. Hon. Earl


Guy, J. C. M.
Patrick, C. M.
Wragg, H.


Hannah, I. C.
Peake, O.
Wright, Squadron-Leador J. A. C.


Harbord, A.
Peal, C. U.



Hartington, Marquess of
Penny, Sir G.
TELLERS FOR THE AYES.—


Heilgers, Captain F. F. A.
Petherick, M.
Mr. James Stuart and Lieut.-


Heneage, Lieut.-Colonel A. P.
Pickthorn, K. W. M.
Colonel Llewellin.


Hills, Major Rt. Hon. J. W. (Ripon)
Pilkington, R.





NOES.


Adams, D. (Consult)
Fletcher, Lt.-Cnmdr. R. T. H.
Maclean, N.


Adamson, W. M.
Gallacher, W.
MacMillan, M. (Western Isles)


Ammon, C. G.
Gardner, B. W.
MacNeill, Weir, L.


Attlee, Rt. Hon. C. R.
Garro Jones, G. M.
Mainwaring, W. H.


Banfield, J. W.
Green, W. H. (Deptford)
Marshall, F.


Barnes, A. J.
Greenwood, Rt. Hon. A.
Mathers, G.


Batey, J.
Grenfell, D. R.
Maxton, J.


Benn, Rt. Hon. W. W.
Griffiths, G. A. (Hemsworth)
Morrison, Rt. Hon. H. (Hackney, S.)


Bevan, A.
Griffiths, J. (Llanelly)
Muff, G.


Brooke, W.
Groves, T. E.
Noel-Baker, P. J.


Brown, C. (Mansfield)
Hall, J. H. (Whitechapel)
Oliver, G. H.


Cape, T.
Henderson, A. (Kingswinford)
Paling, W.


Charleton, H. C.
Henderson, J. (Ardwick)
Potts, J.


Cluse, W. S.
Hopkin, D.
Pritt, D. N.


Cocks, F. S.
Jagger, J.
Richards, R. (Wrexham)


Cove, W. G.
Jenkins, A. (Pontypool)
Ridley, G.


Cripps, Hon. Sir Stafford
John, W.
Ritson, J.


Daggar, G.
Jones, A. C. (Shipley)
Rowson, G.


Dalton, H.
Kelly, W. T.
Sexton, T. M.


Day, H.
Kennedy, Rt. Hon. T.
Shinwell, E.


Dobbie, W.
Lathan, G.
Silkin, L.


Dunn, E. (Rother Valley)
Leach, W.
Silverman, S. S.


Ede, J. C.
McEntee, V. La T.
Simpson, F. B.


Edwards, Sir C. (Bedwellty)
McGovern, J.
Smith, Ben (Rotherhithe)







Smith, E. (Stoke)
Watkins, F. C.
Windsor, W. (Hull, C.)


Smith, T. (Normanton)
Watson, W. McL.
Woods, G. S. (Finsbury)


Stewart, W. J. (H'ghf'n-le-Sp'ng)
Wedgwood, Rt. Hon. J. C.



Strauss, G. R. (Lambeth, N.)
Wettwood, J.
TELLERS FOR THE NOES.—


Taylor, R. J. (Morpeth)
Whiteley, W.
Mr. Buchanan and Mr. Stephen.


Tinker, J. J.
Wilkinson, Ellen



Bill read a Second time.

Bill committed to a Committee of the Whole House, for To-morrow.—[Captain Margesson.]

SUPPLY.

Considered in Committee.

[Sir DENNIS HERBERT in the Chair.]

AIR ESTIMATES, 1937.

PERSONNEL.

Resolved,
That a number of Air Forces, not exceeding 70,000, all ranks, be maintained for the Service of the United Kingdom at Home and abroad, exclusive of those serving in India, during the year ending on the 31st day of March, 1938.

Resolution to be reported To-morrow; Committee to sit again To-morrow.

WAYS AND MEANS.

Considered in Committee.

[Sir DENNIS HERBERT in the Chair.]

Resolved,
That towards making good the Supply granted to His Majesty for the Service of the

year ended on the 31st day of March, 1936, the sum of £32,906 4s. 10d. be granted out of the Consolidated Fund of the United Kingdom.

Resolved,
That towards making good the Supply granted to His Majesty for the Service of the year ending on the 31st day of March, 1937, the sum of £4,391,947 be granted out of the Consolidated Fund of the United Kingdom.

Resolved,
That towards making good the Supply granted to His Majesty for the Service of the year ending on the 31st day of March, 1938, the sum of £284,370,600 be granted out of the Consolidated Fund of the United Kingdom."—[Lieut.-Colonel Colville.]

Resolutions to be reported To-morrow; Committee to sit again To-morrow.

The remaining Orders were read, and postponed.

ADJOURNMENT.

Resolved, "That this House do now adjourn."—[Captain Margesson.]

Adjourned accordingly at Twenty-eight Minutes after Eleven o'Clock.